How Were You Born? A Glimpse Into Your First Moments In Life…

NTD Newsroom
By NTD Newsroom
November 17, 2016Stories
share
How Were You Born? A Glimpse Into Your First Moments In Life…

Photographer Lennart Nilsson spent 10 years of his life recording the growth of the human embryo, from conception to birth.

The world first heard of Lennart Nilsson in 1965, when LIFE magazine published 16 pages of his photographs of human embryos. The shots were immediately reproduced in ’Stern’, ’Paris Match’, ’The Sunday Times’, and other publications. Microscopes and the cameras were Nilsson’s main passion even in childhood. In time, the ambition formed to show the world the beauty of the human body at the micro level. He managed to take his first photos of a foetus already in 1957, but they weren’t good enough to publish.

Nilsson managed to get his most precise shots with the help of a cystoscope — a medical instrument which is used to examine the inside of the urinary bladder. He attached a camera together with a tiny light to it, and took thousands of photos recording the life of the embryo in its mother’s womb.

Nilsson produced something truly marvellous: for the first time, people were able to see with their own eyes the conception and earliest development of human life.

NTD Photo

The spermatozoon moves along the fallopian tube towards the egg.

NTD Photo

The egg

NTD Photo

The crucial moment

NTD Photo

One of the father’s 200 million spermatozoa penetrates the membrane of the egg.

NTD Photo

The spermatozoon’s point of view. The head contains all of the genetic material.

NTD Photo

A week later, the embryo migrates to the womb by floating downwards through the fallopian tube.

NTD Photo

After another week, the embryo attaches to the wall of the uterus.

NTD Photo

The embryo at 22 day’s development. The grey area will become the child’s brain.

NTD Photo

By the 18th day of development, the foetus’ heart begins to beat.

NTD Photo

28 days after fertilisation.

NTD Photo

At five weeks, the foetus is 9 millimetres long; it’s already possible to see the face with its openings for the mouth, nostrils and eyes.

NTD Photo

40 days of development. The exterior cells of the foetus join with the loose surface of the uterus wall to form the placenta.

NTD Photo

At 8 weeks of development.

NTD Photo

10 weeks. It’s eyelids are already half open. Within several days they will be completely formed.

NTD Photo

At 10 weeks, the embryo already uses its hands to study the environment.

NTD Photo

16 weeks.

NTD Photo

The lines of blood vessels are visible through its skin.

NTD Photo

18 weeks. The foetus can now detect sounds from the outside world.

NTD Photo

19 weeks.

NTD Photo

20 weeks. The foetus is now 20 centimetres long. Hair starts to appear on its head.

NTD Photo

24 weeks.

NTD Photo

6 months.

NTD Photo

36 weeks. In a month, the baby will be born.

Nilsson’s book, ’A Child is Born’, was published in 1965. It sold out in just a few days and has been republished many times, becoming one of the most popular photography books of all time.

Lennart Nillson is now 91. He’s still interested in science and photography