Ross Granville Harrison (January 13, 1870-September 30, 1959)

Fankhauser, G. (1972). "Memories of great embryologists.  Reminiscences of F. Baltzer, H. Spemann, F. R. Lillie, R. G. Harrison, and E. G. Conklin." Am Sci 60(1): 46-55.
 
Gahwiler, B. H. (1999). "Nerve cells in culture: the extraordinary discovery of Ross Granville Harrison." Brain Res Bull 50(5-6): 343-344.
 
Hamburger, V. (1980). "S. Ramon y Cajal, R. G. Harrison, and the beginnings of neuroembryology." Perspect Biol Med 23(4): 600-616.
 
Harvey, A. M. (1975). "Johns Hopkins--the birthplace of tissue culture: the story of Ross G. Harrison, Warren Y. Lewis, and George O. Gey." Johns Hopkins Med J 136(3): 142-149.
 
Hogan, D. B. (1999). "Did Osler suffer from "paranoia antitherapeuticum baltimorensis"?  A comparative content analysis of The Principles and Practice of Medicine and Harrison's Principles of Internal Medicine, 11th edition." CMAJ 161(7): 842-845.
 
Maienschein, J. (1978). Ross Harrison's crucial experiment as a foundation for
modern American experimental embryology, Indiana University: 263.
 
Maienschein, J. (1991). "Experimental biology in transition: Harrison's embryology,1895-1910." Studies in the History of Biology 6: 107-127.
 
Nicholas, J. S. (1961). "Ross Granville Harrison, January 13, 1870-September 30, 1959." Biographical Memoirs: National Academy of Sciences 35: 132-162.
 
Wilens, S. (1980). "The Ross Granville Harrison papers." Mendel Newsletter 19: 1-5.
 
Witkowski, J. A. (1980). "W. T. Astbury and Ross G. Harrison: The search for the molecular determination of form in the developing embryo." Notes and Records of the Royal Society of London 35: 195-219.