Richard Saunders (anatomist)

Professor Richard Lorraine de Chasteney Holbourne Saunders FRSE FRMS (29 May 190821 December 1995) was a 20th century South African anatomist. He received international acclaim for his x-ray and electron microscopy investigations of neurological conditions.[1]

Life

Saunders was born on 29 May 1908 in Grahamstown, South Africa, the son of Lucy Anderson (née Meiklejohn) and Col Frederick Anastasius Saunders, an army surgeon.[2] He studied medicine at Rhodes University then the University of Edinburgh, graduating with an MB ChB in 1932, In 1940 he received his doctorate (MD) with a dissertation on spina bifida.

He lectured in anatomy at the Universityof Edinburgh from 1933 to 1937. In 1937 he emigrated to Canada to take up a post as associate professor of Anatomy at Dalhousie University being appointed by Prof H. G. Grant. He became Assistant Professor in 1942 and full Professor in 1948.[3]

In 1946 he was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh. His proposers were Donald Mainland, James Couper Brash, William Frederick Harvey, and William Ogilvy Kermack.[4]

He died on 21 December 1995 in West Jeddore, Nova Scotia, Canada. His body was returned to Scotland for burial with his parents at Ardchattan Kirk near Oban.[1]

Family

He married Dr Sarah Cameron, and together they had a son, Alistair Corstan de Cusance Maxwell Saunders.

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gollark: Qualcomm stuff is somewhat less power-efficient. Apple is just very good at this somehow.
gollark: It's not *just* it being ARM.
gollark: But there is absolutely no chance that they have developed something 3 times faster at single-threaded workloads than the already rather good M1.
gollark: I think they have 8 high performance cores versus 4 or so before, so it is at least plausibly somewhat over twice as powerful at that.

References


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