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Transcription
of the audio
"They
were used to diagnose broken bones and they were
used to find foreign bodies, such as bullets or
needles that people had got in their hands and
feet.
And
gradually, because people had to learn just what
these funny shadowy images meant, they were used
to diagnose other sorts of conditions, enlarged
hearts or lung disease and so forth."
|

Dr.
Ghislaine Lawrence, medical curator, the Science
Museum, London |