| When the    Renaissance physician and expert dissector Andreas    Vesalius first published "De humani    corporis fabrica" in 1543, he provided the most detailed look    inside the human body of his time. A previously unknown copy    of the impressive anatomy textbook resurfaced a few years ago, and it    apparently contains more than a thousand hand-written notes and corrections    by the author himself. The annotations reveal that Vesalius was meticulously    planning a third edition of the book that never made it to print, researchers    say. "This book is his    work bench as much as the dissecting table," Vivian    Nutton, a University College London    professor emeritus, writes in a recently published analysis of the text in    the journal Medical History. Some edits show that Vesalius    wanted to correct mistakes of grammar and syntax and to make his Latin more    elegant. Other markings show that he wanted to draw attention to misshapen or    illegible letters for his block-cutter. Vesalius also intended to add new    information to the text as he learned more about the human body, including    what may be one of the oldest references to the practice of female genital    mutilation. In his discussion of circumcision,    Vesalius scrawled at the bottom of the page that Ethiopians "cut off the    fleshy processes from new born girls in accordance with their religion in the    same way as they remove the foreskins of boys, 'although in their religious    ceremonies they are otherwise generally similar to those of us    Christians,'" Nutton writes. "This is arguably the first reference    in a medical text to female genital mutilation for non-medical    purposes." The copy of the book, on    loan from an unnamed German collector, is currently available for study at    the University of Toronto's Thomas Fisher Rare Book Library. "He is seen    constantly attempting to improve his text both scientifically, and    stylistically, and to make it clearer and more accessible to his    readers," Philip Oldfield, science and medicine librarian at the    University of Toronto, said in a statement this week. "All the evidence    points to the conclusion that Vesalius was preparing a new edition of De fabrica that    unfortunately never materialized." The book will be featured    as part of an exhibition next year in Toronto to mark the 500th anniversary    of Vesalius's birth. Copyright    2013 LiveScience, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This    material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. | 
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