Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://wikidata.dbpedia.org/resource/Q3161228> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 65 of
65
with 100 triples per page.
- Q3161228 description "British pathologist".
- Q3161228 description "British pathologist".
- Q3161228 subject Q6470710.
- Q3161228 subject Q6562516.
- Q3161228 subject Q7004997.
- Q3161228 subject Q7020244.
- Q3161228 subject Q7115664.
- Q3161228 subject Q7694153.
- Q3161228 subject Q8170135.
- Q3161228 subject Q8721060.
- Q3161228 subject Q9407860.
- Q3161228 abstract "James Lorrain Smith (21 August 1862–18 April 1931) was a Scottish pathologist known for his works in human physiology, especially his research on respiration in collaboration with John Scott Haldane.He was born in rural Dumfriessshire where his father Walter was Free Church of Scotland minister in Half Morton parish, a few miles north of Gretna Green. He had several talented siblings, including the mycologist, Annie Lorrain Smith who worked informally at the British Museum. His brother walter became a professor of philosophy in Illinoi while another brother William George became a lecturer in psychology.He studied arts, then medicine at the University of Edinburgh in 1889. He then became John Lucas Walker Student in Pathology at the University of Cambridge and then a Demonstrator under Professor Charles Smart Roy who recommended him to follow his studies at the universities of Strasbourg under Friedrich Daniel von Recklinghausen. He spent some time at Copenhagen where he studied techniques for analysing gases in blood in Christian Bohr's laboratory before moving to teach at the Queen's College of Belfast and became a professor in 1901. In 1904 he became Professor of Pathology at Manchester and in 1912 moved to Edinburgh. During the war they introduced the antiseptic "Eusol" (Edinburgh University solution) and suggested the idea of using charcoal in gas masks.Professor Lorrain Smith worked with John Scott Haldane on respiration particularly the transport of oxygen by the blood. The pulmonary condition of intoxication due to excess oxygen or oxygen toxicity is sometimes called "Lorrain Smith effect".He was elected at the Royal Society on 6 May 1909.He died on 18 April 1931. A funeral ceremony was held at the University of Edinburgh.".
- Q3161228 birthDate "1862".
- Q3161228 birthYear "1862".
- Q3161228 deathDate "1931".
- Q3161228 deathYear "1931".
- Q3161228 wikiPageWikiLink Q102496.
- Q3161228 wikiPageWikiLink Q1026315.
- Q3161228 wikiPageWikiLink Q1066083.
- Q3161228 wikiPageWikiLink Q10686.
- Q3161228 wikiPageWikiLink Q123885.
- Q3161228 wikiPageWikiLink Q125223.
- Q3161228 wikiPageWikiLink Q126514.
- Q3161228 wikiPageWikiLink Q135503.
- Q3161228 wikiPageWikiLink Q160302.
- Q3161228 wikiPageWikiLink Q1748.
- Q3161228 wikiPageWikiLink Q3046878.
- Q3161228 wikiPageWikiLink Q4267084.
- Q3161228 wikiPageWikiLink Q472287.
- Q3161228 wikiPageWikiLink Q521.
- Q3161228 wikiPageWikiLink Q559029.
- Q3161228 wikiPageWikiLink Q629.
- Q3161228 wikiPageWikiLink Q62920.
- Q3161228 wikiPageWikiLink Q6470710.
- Q3161228 wikiPageWikiLink Q6562516.
- Q3161228 wikiPageWikiLink Q6602.
- Q3161228 wikiPageWikiLink Q7004997.
- Q3161228 wikiPageWikiLink Q7020244.
- Q3161228 wikiPageWikiLink Q7115664.
- Q3161228 wikiPageWikiLink Q7175.
- Q3161228 wikiPageWikiLink Q7208.
- Q3161228 wikiPageWikiLink Q7694153.
- Q3161228 wikiPageWikiLink Q7873.
- Q3161228 wikiPageWikiLink Q8170135.
- Q3161228 wikiPageWikiLink Q8721060.
- Q3161228 wikiPageWikiLink Q9407860.
- Q3161228 dateOfBirth "1862".
- Q3161228 dateOfDeath "1931".
- Q3161228 name "Smith, James Lorrain".
- Q3161228 shortDescription "British pathologist".
- Q3161228 type Person.
- Q3161228 type Agent.
- Q3161228 type Person.
- Q3161228 type Agent.
- Q3161228 type NaturalPerson.
- Q3161228 type Thing.
- Q3161228 type Q215627.
- Q3161228 type Q5.
- Q3161228 type Person.
- Q3161228 comment "James Lorrain Smith (21 August 1862–18 April 1931) was a Scottish pathologist known for his works in human physiology, especially his research on respiration in collaboration with John Scott Haldane.He was born in rural Dumfriessshire where his father Walter was Free Church of Scotland minister in Half Morton parish, a few miles north of Gretna Green. He had several talented siblings, including the mycologist, Annie Lorrain Smith who worked informally at the British Museum.".
- Q3161228 label "James Lorrain Smith".
- Q3161228 givenName "James Lorrain".
- Q3161228 name "James Lorrain Smith".
- Q3161228 name "Smith, James Lorrain".
- Q3161228 surname "Smith".