User:djd/sandbox/Transparent Men/Project



Welcome to my sandbox. These pages are part of a project working area, and contain articles, proposed edits, links, etc. that are currently being developed. None of this content is anywhere near submission quality! Browse at your own risk.

Proposed article edits edit

Welcome to my sandbox. This article is / These proposed edits are currently being developed and are nowhere near submission quality!

Manikin or Mannequin (Medical) edit

Possible edits to the current article Mannequin.

Transparent men edit

Proposed expansion of the current article Manikin.

Link Farm edit

This section is a gathering place for links to articles of potential use in building the final result and/or source references.

English edit

German Transparent Men (Gläserner Mensch) and Women (Gläserne Frau) edit

  • Redirects (currently to Manikin, proposed section link)
  • Proposed Redirects as section link
  • References update cite in International Hygiene Exhibition
    • Vogel, Klaus (1999). "The Transparent Man — some comments on the history of a symbol" (PDF). In Bud, Robert; Finn, Bernard; Trischler, Helmuth (eds.). Manifesting Medicine: Bodies and Machines. Artefacts: Studies in the History of Science and Technology (series website). Vol. 1. Amsterdam: Harwood Academic Publishers. pp. 31–61. ISBN 978-90-5702-430-6. ISSN 1029-3353. LCCN 2002421684. Retrieved June 12, 2013. {{cite book}}: External link in |series= (help) (online version missing pp. 39-46)
  • German Hygiene Museum (Dresden) [1] (see also German) commons:Category:Deutsches Hygiene-Museum
  • Camp Transparent Woman
  • Related products from German Hygiene Museum. Likely not WP:NOTEworthy on their own, possible redirects to section links??
    • Transparent Engine
    • Transparent Factory
    • Transparent Cow
    • Transparent Horse
  • German Historical Museum [6] (see also German) Current owner of American copies now back in Germany.
  • German Health Museum (Cologne) possibly defunct? Created by principals of German Hygiene Museum after moving to West Germany, competed with East German museum.

Miss Anatomy edit

  • Proposed Redirect as section link
  • Miss Anatomy only known references from 1937
  • References
    • Penn, Charles A., ed. (July 1937). ""Miss Anatomy" A Superb Example of Model Craftsmanship". The Model Craftsman. 6 (2). Model Craftsman Publishing Corp.: cover, 11.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: date and year (link)

Transparent Anatomical Manikin (TAM) edit

Visible Man and Woman (scale model kits) edit

Related edit

German edit

German Transparent Men (Gläserner Mensch) and Women (Gläserne Frau) edit

Related edit