Modern surgery, general and operative . Fig. 502.—^The meningeal artery exposedby trephining (after Esmarch). Fig. 503.—View of the brain from above (Ecker). and the glabella. To find the fissure of Sylvius (Fig. 504, S, S, S), draw a line from the external angular process to the occipital protuberance. The fissure of Sylvius begins on this line i^ inches behind the external angular process; ^ American Text-Book of Surgery. Craniocerebral Topography 771 t±ie main branch of the fissure runs toward the parietal eminence; the ascend-ing branch of the fissure corresponds to the squamosphenoidal su


Modern surgery, general and operative . Fig. 502.—^The meningeal artery exposedby trephining (after Esmarch). Fig. 503.—View of the brain from above (Ecker). and the glabella. To find the fissure of Sylvius (Fig. 504, S, S, S), draw a line from the external angular process to the occipital protuberance. The fissure of Sylvius begins on this line i^ inches behind the external angular process; ^ American Text-Book of Surgery. Craniocerebral Topography 771 t±ie main branch of the fissure runs toward the parietal eminence; the ascend-ing branch of the fissure corresponds to the squamosphenoidal suture, andcontinues upward in the sameline A inch above the suture. , The prcccntral sulcus (Fig. 504,f) limits anteriorly the ascend-ing frontal convolution; it runsparallel %Aith and just behindthe coronal suture, and a fin-gers breadth in front of thefissure of Rolando. The iutra-parietal fissure (Figs. 503, 504,ip) limits the ascending pa-rietal convolution begins opposite the junctionof the lower and middle thir


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, bookpublishe, booksubjectsurgery