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In addition to the appendix, my go to example of this is my friend's favourite organ: the Thymus [1]! If you've heard of "T-Cells" you indirectly know about it.

The interesting thing is that it is in a human when they are born, grows until puberty, then gets smaller and smaller until it can be quite small and difficult to detect in a grown adult.

I can imagine medical explorers cutting open dead 40 year olds in the year 1900, probably not finding any obvious organ there -- while perhaps cutting open dead children may have been a lot less common (and perhaps distasteful). If you did find something there, you would not assume an important organ present in a child and essential for their immune system would shrink and almost go away.

It would be more likely to be labelled nothing, an abnormal growth, or even a cause for death or illness (pressure on the heart/lungs!).



The thymus is amazing... I ignored it for a long time then saw an amazing seminar. The thymus plays an important role in training the immune system: it expresses cells similar to cells all over the body, and then "educates" T-cells to avoid attacking those. Failures of the thymus often lead to autoimmune disorders.


I dunno. Comparative anatomy was a thing then and the anatomist may even have been fond of sweetbreads. They were still popular on menus in Paris when I was there a few months ago. It's possible they were more notable for their absence in adult humans.


Although, as it happens, the thymus was known at least as far back as the ancient Greeks:

https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/29858845/


>my friend's favourite organ

Woody Allen's second favorite organ is the brain : https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ngizj5FIcjo




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