The morphology and evolutional significance of the pineal body : being part I of a contribution to the study of the epiphysis cerebri with an interpretation of the morphological, physiological and clinical evidence . Fig. 26 Frontal section showing epiphyseal complex in a 26-day old Iguanatuberculata, according to Klinckowstroem, 1894. P/., paraphysis; Ds., dorsal sac; Npar., nervus parapinealis; Ep., proximalportion of pineal organ; Ch , commissura habenularis; M., midbrain epiphyseal origin of the parietal eye in Saurians and confirmthe hypothesis of its embryonic individuality. Leydig238 in


The morphology and evolutional significance of the pineal body : being part I of a contribution to the study of the epiphysis cerebri with an interpretation of the morphological, physiological and clinical evidence . Fig. 26 Frontal section showing epiphyseal complex in a 26-day old Iguanatuberculata, according to Klinckowstroem, 1894. P/., paraphysis; Ds., dorsal sac; Npar., nervus parapinealis; Ep., proximalportion of pineal organ; Ch , commissura habenularis; M., midbrain epiphyseal origin of the parietal eye in Saurians and confirmthe hypothesis of its embryonic individuality. Leydig238 in1891 confirmed the view of Beraneck in Lacerta agilis. Dendy86also states that the parietal eye and what he calls the parietalstalk arise from two distinct evaginations in the roof-plate ofthe interbrain. By parietal stalk, Dendy refers to the portionof the epiphyseal complex here referred to as the pineal organ. - ,. w. 27


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, bookpublisherphila, bookyear1919