No; Caspar Bartholin the Younger (aka Caspar Bartholin Secundus).
Here's a start: Sphincter of Oddi Broca's area Wernicke's area Bartholin's glands Islets of Langerhans
Named for Dr. Klaus Patau, who reported the syndrome in 1960. It is sometimes called Bartholin-Patau syndrome, named in part for Thomas Bartholin, who described an infant with the syndrome in 1656.
No. He had a eldest brother named Pieter.
The mammary glands, which produce the milk, with which mammals nourish their young.
Charles Darwin had four sisters named Marianne, Caroline, Susan, and Catherine. He also had one brother who was named Erasmus.
mammary glands
The bubonic plague is named after the the lymph glands which swell to form egg-shaped lumps under the skin; these swollen glands are called bubos
Charles Darwin had four sisters named Marianne, Caroline, Susan, and Catherine, and four brothers named Erasmus, William, Leonard, and Robert.
The Endocrine system consists of the glands such as the pituitary gland, thyroid gland, the adrenal glands, and the testes and the ovaries, which all secrete hormones. The thyroid gland does not work with the endocrine system, this system is simply a title of the glands named above.
"Information on his family and early life comes mainly from vague references in his writings. He was almost certainly illegitimate. His father, named Roger Gerard, later became a priest and afterwards curate in Gouda. Little is known of his mother other than that her name was Margaret and she was the daughter of a physician." http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Erasmus
Yes. A cheetah has mammary glands (what mammals are named after) to produce milk to nurture its offspring.
Conn's syndrome is a condition affecting the adrenal glands that causes weakness, cramps, and convulsions. It was named after Jerome Conn, an American endocrinologist, who first described the disorder.