Wool Fibres: Sectioning and Staining, Differentiation of Ortho and Paracortex
- 1 January 1965
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Stain Technology
- Vol. 40 (6) , 339-342
- https://doi.org/10.3109/10520296509116441
Abstract
A double embedding technique for tangential sectioning of hair and wool fibres is as follows: The cleaned fibre bundle is attached to a U-shaped, 16 gauge, tinned-copper wire frame with collodion adhesive, soaked in 6% nitrocellulose for 1 hr, and treated with chloroform for 2 hr. The hardened bundle is then cut fom the wire support and embedded in paraffin-beeswax, 95:5. Sectioning is at 6-8 μ. The use of 2% orange G or saturated aqueous picric acid for quantitative study of the fibres, and the demonstration of wool fibre cortical fractions by staining with polychrome methylene blue after oxidation of the sectioned fibres in a solution of formic acid (98/100 w/v) 25 ml; distilled water, 65 ml; and H2O2 (30% w/v), 10 ml, for 1 hr, is recommended.This publication has 5 references indexed in Scilit:
- Ortho-Para Cortical Differentiation in "Anomalous" Merino WoolAustralian Journal of Biological Sciences, 1957
- The Bilateral Structure of Wool Cortex and Its Relation to CrimpAustralian Journal of Biological Sciences, 1955
- The Heterogeneity of the Keratin FibersTextile Research Journal, 1953
- Crimping of Wool FibersTextile Research Journal, 1953
- Improved technique for hair examinationAmerican Journal of Physical Anthropology, 1935