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The use of the term "advanced" in the title of this book is
somewhat ar bitrary and very much relative with respect to time.
Many techniques which were considered at the "cutting edge" of
ultrastructural methodology just a few years ago are now rou tin
ely used in numerous laboratories. One could cite freeze-fracture,
cryothin sectioning, or indeed most of the field of scan ning
electron microscopy as concrete examples. Thus the use of the term
"ad vanced techniques" must be interpreted with regard to the
present state of the art, and is useful only in informing the
potential reader that this volume is not a primer to be used as an
initial introduction into basic biological elec tron microscopy.
Many excellent volumes have filled that niche in the past few
years, and it is not intended that this modest book be a complete
com pendium of the field. Furthermore, any limited selection of
papers on advanc ed techniques necessarily reflects the preferences
and arbitrary whims of the editor, thereby excluding many equally
important procedures which the knowledgeable reader will readily
identify. The first volume of this series appeared approximately
five years ago and illustrated techniques which were thought to
represent advanced and yet ba sically morphological methods for
gaining increased ultrastructural informa tion from biological
specimens. The present volume, on the other hand, stresses
techniques which provide specific physicochemical data on the speci
mens in addition to the structural information."
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