Georg Ruge

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Georg Ruge

Georg Ruge (June 19, 1852 – January 21, 1919) was a German anatomist and primatologist who was a native of Berlin.

In 1875, he earned his doctorate at the University of Berlin, and later became an assistant to Carl Gegenbaur (1826-1903) in Heidelberg. At Heidelberg he performed important research involving primate morphology, particularly studies of its muscular system. In the mid-1880s he authored works that provided a foundation for comparative anatomical and phylogenetic studies on facial muscles in mammals.[1]

In 1888 Ruge became a professor of anatomy at the University of Amsterdam, and in 1897 obtained the same position at the University of Zurich. Among his better known publications are the following works:

  • Beiträge zum Wachsthum des menschlichen Unterkiefers (Contributions to the growth of the human mandible). dissertation
  • Eintheilung der Gesichtsmuskulatur (Division of the facial muscles).
  • Untersuchungen über die Gesichtsmuskulatur der Primaten, 1887—Studies of the facial muscles of primates.[2]
  • Über die Gesichtsmuskulatur der Halbaffen (On the facial muscles of lemurs).
  • Leitfaden für Präparirübungen
  • Über die peripherischen Gebilde des N. facialis bei Wirbelthieren (On the structure of peripheral facial nerve in vertebrates).

References[edit]

  1. ^ [1] Evolution of facial expression by Richard John Andrew and Ernst Huber
  2. ^ WorldCat Identities (publication)