Genesis 2:7

4QGenesis g
An ancient Hebrew scroll from the Hasmonean period containing one of the earliest physically surviving copies of the Genesis creation narrative. The manuscript preserves unique spacing and paragraph divisions that offer insight into the scribal techniques used to format the days of creation in antiquity.

Rahlfs 907
A 3rd-century Greek Septuagint fragment of Genesis discovered at Oxyrhynchus, Egypt. This manuscript is famous for writing the divine name of God (YHWH) as a double Hebrew 'yod' directly into the surrounding Greek text.

BSB Cod.graec. 610 Nr. 1
Preserves portions of Genesis 37 and 38.

Codex Alexandrinus
Codex Alexandrinus is one of the four great uncial codices of the Greek Bible. It contains the vast majority of the Septuagint and New Testament, and was the first of the great uncials to become accessible to modern scholars.