In development

Carnegie-stage timeline

CS1–CS23 (embryonic) · PCW 9–20 (fetal) · click a stage to inspect

Click a stage to inspect; per-source coverage is shown below. Mouse equivalents are approximate. 3-D model thumbnails: HDBR Atlas, CC BY-NC-SA 4.0.

CS11

23–26 d· Somites 13–20; rostral neuropore closes

The rostral (anterior) neuropore closes. Optic vesicles evaginate.

23–26days p.f.
~E9mouse equiv.
HREM · 2High-Resolution Episcopic Microscopy — block-face imaging of a resin-embedded embryo: each section surface is photographed before microtoming, yielding a perfectly-aligned, isotropic 3D volume. The HDBR human 3-D models are reconstructed from HREM.

Virtual Human Embryo (Cork) registered serial sections at CS11 — reconstructed 3-D volumes; open to scrub through any plane.

gene expression · datasets · 3-D anatomy · disease · drag to rotate, scroll to zoom

Stage-anchored sub-graph, as on the mouse atlas — HDBR Expression gene markers, the HESTA Stereo-seq atlas, HDBR 3-D-model anatomy, and literature-extracted claims for this stage, plus the human disease/phenotype layer (HPO + OMIM) on the shared cross-species anatomy vocabulary.

CS10
Previous
CS1022–23 d
Somites 4–12; neural folds fusing

The Carnegie staging system divides human embryonic development — the first ~8 weeks (56 days) post-fertilization — into 23 stages defined by morphological features rather than by size or age. Virtual Embryo aligns all imagery, anatomy, and spatial transcriptomics to this axis (extended into the fetal period by PCW).

Next
26–30 dCS12
Caudal neuropore closes; upper-limb buds
CS12

Status: the human layer is under construction and currently serves as a reference index — it cites and links out to external resources rather than hosting their data. Any future in-platform integration would follow a formal data-sharing agreement with each originator and preserve full attribution and licence terms (non-commercial academic use). The HDBR 3-D model thumbnails shown are used under CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 with attribution. Carnegie-to-mouse stage equivalences are approximate.