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  1. El fisiólogo alemán Karl Friedrich Burdach (1776-1847) fue quien acuñó el término Biología en el año 1800 aunque en forma independiente también lo usaron en la misma época, Gottfried Reinhold Treviranus y Jean-Baptiste Lamarck y ya había sido empleado en 1776 por Michael Christoph Hanov.

  2. Karl Friedrich Burdach (12 June 1776 – 16 July 1847) was a German physiologist. He was born in Leipzig and died in Königsberg. He was the first to use the word "biology" and was a pioneer of neuroanatomy.

  3. In 1826, the German physiologist Karl Friedrich Burdach (1776-1847) described, from macroscopic study, the fasciculus cuneatus, known as the tract of Burdach: the lateral portion of the posterior columns of the cord that terminate in the nucleus cuneatus of the medulla.

    • J M S Pearce
    • 2006
  4. 23 de jun. de 2006 · In 1826, the German physiologist Karl Friedrich Burdach (17761847) described, from macroscopic study, the fasciculus cuneatus, known as the tract of Burdach: the lateral portion of the posterior columns of the cord that terminate in the nucleus cuneatus of the medulla. Keywords:

  5. 1 de ene. de 2016 · The concept was progressively sculpted in the mind of several pioneers of brain anatomy and physiology, such as Thomas Willis and David Ferrier in England, Karl Friedrich Burdach and Cécile and Oskar Vogt in Germany, and Félix Vicq d’Azyr and Jules Bernard Luys in France.

    • A. Parent
    • 2016
  6. 1 de ene. de 2012 · Willis’s pioneering description influenced markedly some 18th and 19th centuries scholars, particularly the German physician and anatomist Karl Friedrich Burdach (1776-1847)....

  7. 6 de jun. de 2023 · Karl Friedrich Burdach (17761847) is among the main contributors to our established neuroanatomical lexicon (Swanson, 2015). Considering his studies on the cerebral white matter (WM), his legacy entails the identification and labeling of the main association bundles of the human brain (Burdach, 1826 ).