The Brain and Its Environment.
- New Haven:: Yale University Press, 1938., 1938
New Haven:: Yale University Press, 1938., 1938. Sm. 8vo. vii, [5], 117, [1] pp. Figs., index. Black gilt-stamped cloth. Fine. First edition. "During the first half of the 20th Century, Joseph Barcroft, KBE, FRS of Cambridge University became a world leader in respiratory physiology. He determined the role of neural stimulation in the oxygen consumption of several organs, established many of the factors that regulate the binding of oxygen to haemoglobin, explored the determinants of a human's acclimatization to high altitude and developed the field of fetal cardiovascular physiology. Chair of the Cambridge Department of Physiology from 1925 to 1937, he served as a consultant and member of many UK governmental committees. During World War I, he led a British research unit exploring the effects of poisonous gases on pulmonary function and related problems. In addition to his almost 300 publications, several of his monographs are considered as classics." – Longo. See: Lawrence D. Longo, "Sir Joseph Barcroft: one Victorian physiologist's contributions to a half century of discovery," Journal of Physiology. 2016 Mar 1; 594(5): pp. 1113–1125.
Details
Title
The Brain and Its Environment.
Author
BARCROFT, Joseph (1872-1947).
Condition
Unknown
Publisher
Yale University Press, 1938.: New Haven:
Date
1938