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Constructing a Body of Knowledge

A lab at Orange Coast College uses a process to preserve specimens for use in science classes.

Orange County | Orange Peeled / A LOOK AT LIFE INSIDE THE COUNTY

December 13, 2004|Kimi Yoshino, Times Staff Writer

There's a greyhound's heart, a cat's spinal cord, a smoker's lung. A human female torso and head sliced into 1-inch sections from head to waist, completely preserved -- all touchable, teachable.

The Plastination Lab is one of Orange Coast College's more interesting places.


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On a recent tour, a group of high school students had the chance to touch the human torso -- which Ann Harmer, an anatomy professor, calls "Bernadette" -- and check out a baby dolphin being prepared for plastination. Tour director Naomi Nungaray offered a bit of understatement: "They don't get to see that on a regular basis," she said.

The lab, which opened in 1994, is believed to be the only one in the nation at a community college.

It opened after a student visited a plastination lab in San Diego. He returned to Orange Coast College in Costa Mesa "just ranting and raving" about the wonders of the technique, and urged Harmer and others to look into it.

They went to a conference at Chaffee College in Ontario attended by experts from all over the world. They learned that the process was fairly simple, and that all they needed -- in addition to facilities and supplies -- was a $15 license from German plastination inventor Gunther von Hagens and a handbook on how to do it. The college could use honors students to work in the lab.

When professors returned from the conference, Harmer said, they were ranting and raving too. They secured a $58,000 grant from the Hoag Family Foundation that got them started.

They also needed to find a room for the lab. Coincidentally, there was one available."It had all the amenities, shall we say, of a plastination lab," Harmer said. "Concrete floors, big sinks."

Now it's home to huge freezers, where specimens are stored, and shelves lined with plastinated organs and body parts.

"It's kinda gross," said Laura Lighter, 17, one of the touring students from Coast High School in Huntington Beach. "But it's interesting too."

For Harmer, it has transformed the way she teaches.

"Usually when you have a specimen, it's floating in a jar of formaldehyde," Harmer said. "It gets cloudy. The tissue is damaged. It's toxic. It's drippy. It's smelly. It's not student-friendly. This is different, because they can hold it in their hands. With plastination ... you can carry it around in your suitcase if you want."

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