Held a License for Vivisection, no place named, in 1882 and 1883; also Special Certificate for Experiments without Anæsthetics same years.
Moleschott, Giacomo. Rome Univ. Prof. B. 1822 at Herzogenbusch. M.D. Heidelberg (Univ. Heidelberg and Haarlem); Practised Med. Utrecht; Private Prof. of Physiol. Chem. and Anthropol. Heidelberg, 1847; later Prof. Physiol. Zurich; Univ. Turin 1861; naturalised Italian and Senator, 1876; Prof. Physiology Univ. Rome 1878.
Author of “Physiology of Food,” 1859; “Physiology of Transformation of Substances in Plants and Animals,” 1851; “Physiological Sketches,” 1861; and joint author (with Donders and Van Deen) of “Holländische Beiträge zu den anatomischen und physiologischen Wissenschaften.”
Founded a Physiol. Lab. at Heidelberg in 1853.
“M. Moleschott’s experiments consisted in taking the liver out of animals capable of resisting this mutilation (frogs, for instance, may survive from eight to fifteen days). More than one hundred frogs have been thus prepared by M. Moleschott.”—Note, Béclard’s Traité de Physiologie, p. 716, Vol. I., 1880.
Mollière, Daniel. Paris.
Contrib. to “Progrès Médical,” 1873, p. 163.
Cut the spinal nerves of rabbits and kittens to produce artificial deformity of the spine.
Morgan, C. Lloyd, Prof. Geol. and Biol. Univ. Coll., Bristol; formerly of Rondibosch, South Africa.