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Hippocampus discovery First steps

O descobrimento do hipocampo: primeiros passos

Abstracts

The first steps of the discovery, and the main discoverers, of the hippocampus are outlined. Arantius was the first to describe a structure he named "hippocampus" or "white silkworm". Despite numerous controversies and alternate designations, the term hippocampus has prevailed until this day as the most widely used term. Duvernoy provided an illustration of the hippocampus and surrounding structures, considered the first by most authors, which appeared more than one and a half century after Arantius' description. Some authors have identified other drawings and texts which they claim predate Duvernoy's depiction, in studies by Vesalius, Varolio, Willis, and Eustachio, albeit unconvincingly. Considering the definition of the hippocampal formation as comprising the hippocampus proper, dentate gyrus and subiculum, Arantius and Duvernoy apparently described the gross anatomy of this complex. The pioneering studies of Arantius and Duvernoy revealed a relatively small hidden formation that would become one of the most valued brain structures.

hippocampus; silkworm; discovery; Arantius; Duvernoy; history


Os primeiros passos no descobrimento e os principais descobridores do hipocampo são aqui rastreados. Arantius foi o primeiro a descrever uma estrutura que designou "hipocampo" ou "bicho-da-seda branco". Apesar de muitas controvérsias e denominações alternativas, o termo hipocampo prevaleceu até os dias atuais como o mais amplamente utilizado. Duvernoy apresentou uma ilustração do hipocampo e estruturas próximas, considerada a primeira, de acordo a maioria dos autores, que apareceu mais de um e meio século depois da descrição de Arantius. Alguns autores identificaram outras figuras e textos, que supostamente antedataram os de Duvernoy, nas obras de Vesalius, Varolio, Willis e Eustachio, mas não de modo inequívoco. Considerando a definição da formação hipocampal como compreendendo a hipocampo propriamente dito, giro denteado e subículo, Arantius e Duvernoy aparentemente descreveram a anatomia macroscópica deste complexo. Os estudos pioneiros de Arantius e Duvernoy revelaram uma formação relativamente pequena e ocultada que se tornaria uma das estruturas cerebrais mais valorizadas.

hipocampo; bicho-da-seda; descobrimento; Arantius; Duvernoy; história


INTRODUCTION

The hippocampus may be regarded as one of the most studied structures in the brain. Its anatomy was first described over four centuries ago, but its function remained unclear until the beginning of the modern neurosciences era.11. Bir SC, Ambekar S, Kukreja S, Nanda A. Julius Caesar Arantius (Giulio Cesare Aranzi) (1530-1589) and the hippocampus of the human brain: history behind the discovery. J Neurosurg 2015;122:971-975.,22. Duvernoy H, Cattin F, Risold P-Y. The Human Hippocampus. 4th ed. Berlin: Springer-Verlag; 2013. Its function (e.g., memory processing) may be affected in various neurological and neuropsychiatric disorders such as Alzheimer's disease, temporal lobe epilepsy, stroke, among others.11. Bir SC, Ambekar S, Kukreja S, Nanda A. Julius Caesar Arantius (Giulio Cesare Aranzi) (1530-1589) and the hippocampus of the human brain: history behind the discovery. J Neurosurg 2015;122:971-975.

2. Duvernoy H, Cattin F, Risold P-Y. The Human Hippocampus. 4th ed. Berlin: Springer-Verlag; 2013.
-33. Bartsch T. The Clinical Neurobiology of the Hippocampus. An Integrative View. Oxford: Oxford University Press; 2012. Functional and structural imaging of the hippocampus has become an important surrogate marker for defining clinical states.22. Duvernoy H, Cattin F, Risold P-Y. The Human Hippocampus. 4th ed. Berlin: Springer-Verlag; 2013.,33. Bartsch T. The Clinical Neurobiology of the Hippocampus. An Integrative View. Oxford: Oxford University Press; 2012. The structure may be regarded as a complex that comprises, despite lack of consensus, the hippocampus proper, dentate gyrus and subiculum - the hippocampal formation, where many also include subicular related regions and the entorhinal cortex - the hippocampal region, which pertains to the hippocampal system, part of the limbic network.44. Andersen P, Morris R, Amaral D, Bliss T, O'Keefe J. The hippocampal formation. In: The Hippocampus Book. Andersen P, Morris R, Amaral D, Bliss T, O'Keefe J editors. Oxford: Oxford University Press; 2007, pp 3-6.,55. Angevine Jr J. The development of the hippocampal region. In: The Hippocampus. Volume I: Structure and Development. Isaacson RL, Pribram KH editors. New York: Plenum Press, 1975, pp 61-94.

A brief history is provided tracing the first steps of the discovery, and main discoverers, restricted now to gross anatomical features of the hippocampus, identified at this time as the hippocampal formation as defined above.

THE FIRST DESCRIPTION OF THE HIPPOCAMPUS

The first description and denomination of the structure, practically undisputed, is credited to Giulio Cesare Aranzio (Arantius) (Julius Caesar Arantius [Bononiensis]) (c. 1530-1589), an Italian anatomist and surgeon, and pupil of Vesalius11. Bir SC, Ambekar S, Kukreja S, Nanda A. Julius Caesar Arantius (Giulio Cesare Aranzi) (1530-1589) and the hippocampus of the human brain: history behind the discovery. J Neurosurg 2015;122:971-975.,66. Judaš M, Pletikos M. A note on the sea-horse in the human brain. Translat Neurosci 2010;1(4):335-337.

7. Swanson LW. Neuroanatomical Terminology. Oxford: Oxford University Press. 2015, pp 296-299.
-88. Brambilla GA. Storia delle scoperte fisico-medico-anatomico-chirurgiche fatte dagli uomini illustri italiani. Tom 2. Giulio Cesare Aranzio. Milano: Nel Imperial Monistero di s. Ambrogio Maggiore, 1781, pp188-198. [Retrieved from: https://books.google.com.br/books/download/Storia_delle_scoperte_fisico_medico_anat.pdf?id=j2mmUNVuw3gC&hl=ptBR&capid=AFLRE72pDS09gbo8EWsRy2gnLQCiAIfQZWDhXUWlBh9acxJVm4GbOomUxPnf5nBdjahfrFH6J2u9mdzpYjeNP_bLWmaSFY5Q&continue=https://books.google.com.br/books/download/Storia_delle_scoperte_fisico_medico_anat.pdf%3Fid%3Dj2mmUNVuw3gC%26hl%3Dpt-BR%26output%3Dpdf]
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(Figure 1). He described and named the anatomical formation in a study of the human brain in the 1st issue of Anatomicarum Observationum Liber (Book of Anatomical Observations), which appeared together with the 3rd revised edition of De Humano Foetu Liber (Book on the Human Fetus) and the 1st version of De Tumoribus Secundum Locus Affectus Liber (Book on Tumors According the Affected Site), published in 1587, compiled together into a single volume.11. Bir SC, Ambekar S, Kukreja S, Nanda A. Julius Caesar Arantius (Giulio Cesare Aranzi) (1530-1589) and the hippocampus of the human brain: history behind the discovery. J Neurosurg 2015;122:971-975.,22. Duvernoy H, Cattin F, Risold P-Y. The Human Hippocampus. 4th ed. Berlin: Springer-Verlag; 2013.,66. Judaš M, Pletikos M. A note on the sea-horse in the human brain. Translat Neurosci 2010;1(4):335-337.,99. Arantius JC. De Humano Foetu Liber tertio editus, ac recognitus. Anatomicarum Observationum Liber, ac de Tumoribus Secundum Locos Affectos Liber. Venetiis: Apud Iacobum Brechtanum, 1578, pp 41-46.[Retrieved from: http://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/bpt6k606047/f2.image] Lewis FT. The significance of the term hippocampus. J Comp Neurol 1923;35:213-230. The Anatomicarum Observationum Liber, concerning the ventricles, choroid plexus and hippocampus, contains five chapters: Chapter I and II describe the ventricles, choroid plexus, and the formation and storage of animal spirits; Chapter III, the main one, provides a description of the hippocampus or silkworm (vermis bombycinus) (caterpillar of the Bombyx mori moth) and its intraventricular location (inferior or temporal horn) ("ventricle of the hippocampus"); Chapter IV describes the procedure to reach the target structures, while in Chapter V he commented briefly on the ventricles, including the hippocampal one, and the animal spirits produced there. Chapter III was featured in translated and commented form in papers by Lewis'1010. Tilney F. The hippocampus and its relations to the corpus callosum. J Nerv Ment Dis 1939;89:433-513. and Tilney,1111. Walther O. Hippocampal terminology: concepts, misconceptions, origins. Endeavour 2002; 26(2):41-44. whereas Chapters I, III, and IV appeared as selections in the paper of Walther,1212. Hirsch A. "Duvernoy, Johann Georg". In: Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie presented here as excerpts from the texts in their original and translated forms (Box 1).

Figure 1.
Giulio Cesare Aranzio, from Bologna (illustration from Brambilla, 1781).8

Box 1.
Excerpts from Arantius`' Anatomicarum Observationum Liber (Chapters I and III)9 (translation checked against those of Lewis, Tilney, and Walther).10,11,12

THE FIRST ILLUSTRATION OF THE HIPPOCAMPUS

According to most authors, the first drawing of the human hippocampus was provided by Johann [Johannes] Georg Duvernoy (Johannes Georgius Duvernoi) (1691-1759), a German anatomist and botanist.1313. (1877), 2016. [Retrived from http://data.deutsche-biographie.de/rest/sfz12158.pdf]
http://data.deutsche-biographie.de/rest/...
,1414. Mazolinni RG. Schemes and Models of the Thinking Machine (1662-1762). In: The Enchanted Loom: History of Neuroscience P. Corsi (editor),. Oxford: Oxford University Press 1991, pp 68-143, 198-200. [Retrieved from: https://www.academia.edu/11367646/_Schemes_and_Models_of_the_Thinking_Machine_1662-1762_._In_P._Corsi_editor_The_Enchanted_Loom_Chapters_in_the_History_of_Neuroscience._Oxford_Oxford_University_Press_1991_pp._68-143_198-200]
https://www.academia.edu/11367646/_Schem...
He wrote a short essay, De Sinibus Cerebri (On sinuses [ventricles, cavities] of the brain), published in 1729 in the Commentarii Academiae Scientiarum Imperialis Petropolitanae (Commentaries of the Imperial Academy of Sciences of St. Petersburg), where he presented the text divided into four paragraphs (§1-§4), also denominating the structure as hippocampus or silkworm. It was illustrated with a drawing, Plate XII, of a right human dissected hemisphere, depicting the hippocampus and neighboring structures.1515. Duvernoy JG. De Sinibus Cerebri. Comm Acad Sci Imp Petropolitanae 1729;4:112-116. [Retrieved from: http://books.googleusercontent.com/books/content?req=AKW5Qafqc_X_lQ8kIW-ReJhb81bZJ-16zsLAZJSoH LojCO7-KFTdnSAGa6HISzFaxZjdC2Qg9tOzFz9IYB8gXogb8BVdOrkUSBmz2B54tsTq-F23XgkfGgdRKWiegZs891rCVaretg89uVnbPfMvVpzlpPwsWNxmL6oaILdU6j9wwYQLT_c0bHUm1SV6YQ2VVr84J74PIjlwR_NFyw1XN0DptadUfA1EAQSu1Y51lXlIYaAwiVuPk2voh3vwtI1x__LlbbBngSJUPTjrDXNro095DqPrJZ9GZlNSk9W7R-59b3p9D8_MsHU]
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This material was included as summarized descriptions and some original and translated excerpts (Box 2), as well as a figure with explanations (Figure 2).

Box 2.
Excerpts from Duvernoy's De sinibus cerebri (paragraphs 1-4).10,15,17

Figure 2.
Duvernoy's Plate XII depicting the drawing of a dissected right hemisphere, displaying the hippocampus and neighboring structures.15

COMMENTARIES

The pioneering description of Arantius, and much later Duvernoy's depiction of the hippocampus, revealed a relatively small formation that would become one of the most valued brain structures. It should be noted that up to this point, outstanding anatomical researchers such as Galen, Vesalius, and Willis, had practically overlooked this formation, located deep among numerous other structures in the brain.1010. Tilney F. The hippocampus and its relations to the corpus callosum. J Nerv Ment Dis 1939;89:433-513.,1212. Hirsch A. "Duvernoy, Johann Georg". In: Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie,1616. Hill A. The Hippocampus. Philosoph Trans Roy Soc B 1893;389-427. [Retrieved from: http://rstb.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/royptb/ 184/389.full.pdf]
http://rstb.royalsocietypublishing.org/c...

Arantius was the first to describe this structure, protruding from the floor of the inferior (temporal) horn of the lateral ventricle, which he denominated hippocampus, as to his mind it bore resemblance to a seahorse (or hippocampus, Greek: hippocampus [hippos=horse, kampus=sea monster]) or rather, to a white silkworm (bombycini vermis candidi) (white caterpillar of the Bombyx).1,66. Judaš M, Pletikos M. A note on the sea-horse in the human brain. Translat Neurosci 2010;1(4):335-337.,77. Swanson LW. Neuroanatomical Terminology. Oxford: Oxford University Press. 2015, pp 296-299.,99. Arantius JC. De Humano Foetu Liber tertio editus, ac recognitus. Anatomicarum Observationum Liber, ac de Tumoribus Secundum Locos Affectos Liber. Venetiis: Apud Iacobum Brechtanum, 1578, pp 41-46.[Retrieved from: http://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/bpt6k606047/f2.image] Lewis FT. The significance of the term hippocampus. J Comp Neurol 1923;35:213-230.,1010. Tilney F. The hippocampus and its relations to the corpus callosum. J Nerv Ment Dis 1939;89:433-513. He provided a summarized explanation of the technical procedure, where the dissection was performed with the aid of a bone knife and hands used to reach the deep structures, suggesting that he examined the brain through the exposed lateral ventricle, inspecting the temporal extension, thereby locating the hippocampus with its three parts - head, body, and tail. No illustration of the structure was presented. Thus, his perception of a seahorse or of a silkworm remained rather unclear.11. Bir SC, Ambekar S, Kukreja S, Nanda A. Julius Caesar Arantius (Giulio Cesare Aranzi) (1530-1589) and the hippocampus of the human brain: history behind the discovery. J Neurosurg 2015;122:971-975. Many controversies arose concerning the description and denomination, as well as alternative designations.66. Judaš M, Pletikos M. A note on the sea-horse in the human brain. Translat Neurosci 2010;1(4):335-337.,1010. Tilney F. The hippocampus and its relations to the corpus callosum. J Nerv Ment Dis 1939;89:433-513.,1111. Walther O. Hippocampal terminology: concepts, misconceptions, origins. Endeavour 2002; 26(2):41-44. However, the term hippocampus has endured until the present day, being the most widely used in the literature.11. Bir SC, Ambekar S, Kukreja S, Nanda A. Julius Caesar Arantius (Giulio Cesare Aranzi) (1530-1589) and the hippocampus of the human brain: history behind the discovery. J Neurosurg 2015;122:971-975. Other terms emerged designating the structure or its component parts, which will be reviewed on another occasion.77. Swanson LW. Neuroanatomical Terminology. Oxford: Oxford University Press. 2015, pp 296-299.,1010. Tilney F. The hippocampus and its relations to the corpus callosum. J Nerv Ment Dis 1939;89:433-513.,1616. Hill A. The Hippocampus. Philosoph Trans Roy Soc B 1893;389-427. [Retrieved from: http://rstb.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/royptb/ 184/389.full.pdf]
http://rstb.royalsocietypublishing.org/c...
,1717. Olry R. Métaphores zoologiques au sein des ventricules latéraux du cerveau, ou l'imagination au service de la linguistique. Hist Sci Méd 1991;25(3):221-224. [Retrieved from: http://www.biusante.parisdescartes.fr/sfhm/hsm/HSMx1991x025x003/HSMx1991x025x003x0221.pdf].
http://www.biusante.parisdescartes.fr/sf...

Duvernoy endorsed Arantius' description of the ventricles and the structures therein, and additionally provided an illustration of the hippocampus and surrounding formations,1515. Duvernoy JG. De Sinibus Cerebri. Comm Acad Sci Imp Petropolitanae 1729;4:112-116. [Retrieved from: http://books.googleusercontent.com/books/content?req=AKW5Qafqc_X_lQ8kIW-ReJhb81bZJ-16zsLAZJSoH LojCO7-KFTdnSAGa6HISzFaxZjdC2Qg9tOzFz9IYB8gXogb8BVdOrkUSBmz2B54tsTq-F23XgkfGgdRKWiegZs891rCVaretg89uVnbPfMvVpzlpPwsWNxmL6oaILdU6j9wwYQLT_c0bHUm1SV6YQ2VVr84J74PIjlwR_NFyw1XN0DptadUfA1EAQSu1Y51lXlIYaAwiVuPk2voh3vwtI1x__LlbbBngSJUPTjrDXNro095DqPrJZ9GZlNSk9W7R-59b3p9D8_MsHU]
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regarded as the first by most authors. It must be stressed that it appeared more than one and a half century after Arantius' description.

However, some authors have identified other illustrations and texts, which they claim predate Duvernoy's depictions listed in chronological order of publication as follows: Andrea Vesalius (Andreas Vesalius) (1514-1564) in the 1543 edition of the De Humani Corporis Fabrica (On the Fabric of the Human Body), presented drawings and text that might be identified as pertaining to the hippocampus. The structure allegedly illustrated, though not unmistakably, was not described or named.77. Swanson LW. Neuroanatomical Terminology. Oxford: Oxford University Press. 2015, pp 296-299. It should be noted that Vesalius clearly depicted and labeled only the fornix or tortoise, in a horizontally (axially) sectioned brain (e.g. Fifth Figure: S, T, V. Superior corporis instar fornicis seu testudinis extructi superfícies,... ("S, T, V. Upper body surface shaped like a fornix [vault] or tortoise..."). X, X..., corpori testudinem referenti continua. ("X, X....the reported body of the tortoise continues."),1818. Vesalius A. De Humani Corporis Fabrica Libri Septem. Basel: Oporinus; 1543. [Retrieved from: http://www.bvh.univ-tours.fr/B372615206_ 47294/B372615206_47294.pdf]
http://www.bvh.univ-tours.fr/B372615206_...
without any reference to the hippocampus.

Costanzo Varolio (Constantius Varolius) (1543-1575), in his book De nervis opticis (On the optic nerves), published in 1573, supposedly presented a "rough sketch of the hippocampus", but without any reference to this structure.1010. Tilney F. The hippocampus and its relations to the corpus callosum. J Nerv Ment Dis 1939;89:433-513.,1717. Olry R. Métaphores zoologiques au sein des ventricules latéraux du cerveau, ou l'imagination au service de la linguistique. Hist Sci Méd 1991;25(3):221-224. [Retrieved from: http://www.biusante.parisdescartes.fr/sfhm/hsm/HSMx1991x025x003/HSMx1991x025x003x0221.pdf].
http://www.biusante.parisdescartes.fr/sf...
The two plates displayed in this book,1919. Varolio C. De nervis opticis. Padua: Paulum & Antonium, Meittus fratres, 1573. [Retrieved from: http://www.archive.org/details/constantiivaroliO Ovaro]
http://www.archive.org/details/constanti...
as far as can be seen, do not allow this formation to be distinguished.

Thomas Willis (Thomae Willis) (1621-1675), in the Cerebri Anatome (Brain Anatomy) of 1664, Chapter X, Figure VII, neglected the structure as he described and depicted a dissected ovine (sheep) brain. However, a formation considered recognizable as the hippocampus was identified,1010. Tilney F. The hippocampus and its relations to the corpus callosum. J Nerv Ment Dis 1939;89:433-513. labeled as D.D. Corporis callosi margo, qui caudicem medullarem prope Cerebellum amplexabatur. ("D.D. Margin of the corpus callosum, which embraces the medullary stem close to the Cerebellum."), closely related to C.C. Fornicis brachia, qui caudicem medullarem e regione glandulae pinealis amplexabantur. ("C.C. Arms [brachia] of the Fornix, which embraces the medullary stem and the pineal gland.").2020. Willis T. Cerebri Anatome, cui Accessit Nervorum Descriptio et Usus. Londini: typis J. Flesher, impensis J. Martyn et J. Allestry, 1664. [Retrieved from: http://www.biusante.parisdescartes.fr/histoire/medica/resultats/?cote=05344x01&do=pdf]
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The illustration displays a distorted and unclear anatomy of the dissected brain. The recognition of the hippocampus is not convincing. The apparently same dissected brain is presented redrawn in his Anima Brutorum (The Soul of Beasts) in the 1672 edition, Plate V, with modifications, and changes in the labels,1010. Tilney F. The hippocampus and its relations to the corpus callosum. J Nerv Ment Dis 1939;89:433-513.,2121. Willis T. De Anima Brutorum quae Hominis Vitalis ac Sensitiva est, exercitationes duae. Londini: Prostant apud Gulielm. Wells, & Rob. Scot; 1672. [Retrieved from: http://www.biusante.parisdescartes.fr/histoire/medica/resultats/?cote=05342&do=pdf]
http://www.biusante.parisdescartes.fr/hi...
where the alleged structure now becomes unrecognizable.

Bartolomeo Eustachio (Bartholomeus Eustachius) (c. 1510-1574) showed in the Tabulae Anatomicae (Anatomical Plates), probably commissioned in 1552, but first published by Giovanni Maria Lancisi (1654-1720) only in 1714, almost one and a half century after Eustachio's death, a dissection that displayed a structure presumed to be the hippocampus.1010. Tilney F. The hippocampus and its relations to the corpus callosum. J Nerv Ment Dis 1939;89:433-513. However, this dissection (Plate XVII, Figure V, legend on pp 43-44), depicts the median fornix and the posterior pillars seemingly fusing in an indistinct way and designated by him as the cornua (horns), labeled only in the 1717 edition (Plate VI, figure 5... Insuper fornicem in situ [...In addition to the fornix in situ], cujusprincipium [whose body], b. cornua verò [the real horns], c, c... (b=body of the fornix, c, c=horns).2222. Eustachio B. Tabulae Anatomicae. Lancisio JM illust & ed. Romae: Ex Officina typographica Francisci Gonzagae. 1714. [Retrieved from: http://books.googleusercontent.com/books/content?req=AKW5QadgactdW1cpIQyZRjiRC-fJWcN-7DRht4wA5B8AzADcEKt7OuYLpiBpUkhvMoYNj_9Apsfl3WmouHmdYNwZANPEwig8D5o9DQSt6sC7eDs8WIvsaXixSux9j-SNOXZjSyeIkpXDDbw-OOx1S4yKw2XwpOH4JaIadCYkthYT-Kmn2MaMLA3-WQN8CMCDLXckox_HlNNy588k9UYuVMic7qW1teA07zfej0veooRhBYioCBAEJy4x3dRhAQxpWRAXEj4N66sd54dJUnDQYPnu4OyOOVLi7HhVNiw8tSKN4qPu8TvCQ]
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,2323. Eustachio B. Tabulae anatomicae. Lancisio JM illust & ed. Colloniae Allabrogum: Cramer & Perachon, 1717. [Retrieved from: http://polib.univ-lille3.fr/documents/B590092101_0000000000205_IMG.pdf]
http://polib.univ-lille3.fr/documents/B5...
There is no mention of the hippocampus. The distinction between the posterior pillars and the horns is not at all clear, as they appear as a single structure, constituting more an illustration of the fornix only.

Thus, Duvernoy's illustration may be regarded as the first drawing of the structure. If not the first, it may be stated that it was a good depiction1010. Tilney F. The hippocampus and its relations to the corpus callosum. J Nerv Ment Dis 1939;89:433-513. and the best and most representative at the time.

As originally described, and remains so in the present day, the name "hippocampus" applies to the entire ventricular protrusion. Considering here one of the hippocampal formation definitions, comprising the hippocampus proper, dentate gyrus and subiculum, as described above, Arantius and Duvernoy apparently described the gross anatomy of this complex. Further identification of the component structures occurred later, and will be the focus of another study at a later date.

References

Publication Dates

  • Publication in this collection
    Jan-Mar 2016

History

  • Received
    12 Dec 2015
  • Accepted
    16 Feb 2016
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