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Royal Army Medical Corps

The bodies and organs of gassed soldiers were regularly shipped back to Porton for microscopic examination by the physiologists of the Royal Army Medical Corps — the body snatchers as they were known at Porton. For the scientists records, oil paintings were made of organs taken from post mortems. In some cases the bodies... [Pg.29]

Sir Austin Anderson, Some Recollections of Porton in World War I , Journal of the Royal Army Medical Corps, 116(3), pp. 173—7. [Pg.139]

Cathcart, E. R, Richardson, D. T, Campbell, W. (1922). Army Hygiene Advisory Committee Report No. 3 - On tire maximum load to be carried by the soldier. Journal of the Royal Army Medical Corps 40. [Pg.303]

Carter 2000, p. 52. Barrett 1948 Ombudsman for National Defence and Canadian Forces (NDCF), redacted extract of a soldier remembering his time at SufBeld, pp. 1234-42 also pp. 1229-31. H.M. Barrett from the University of Toronto became Flead of Research, and Maj J.C. Paterson from the Royal Canadian Army Medical Corps led the physiological and pathological department also Smith, Mawdsley 2011 Avery 2013, pp. 2off. [Pg.510]


See other pages where Royal Army Medical Corps is mentioned: [Pg.39]    [Pg.106]    [Pg.169]    [Pg.305]    [Pg.727]    [Pg.39]    [Pg.663]    [Pg.2006]    [Pg.39]    [Pg.106]    [Pg.169]    [Pg.305]    [Pg.727]    [Pg.39]    [Pg.663]    [Pg.2006]   


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