Quain's elements of anatomy . Fig. 40.—Columnar epithelium cells of the rabbits intestine (E. A. S.).The cells have been isolated after maceration in very weak chromic acid. Theyare much vacuolated, and one of them (2) lias a fat-globule near its attached end ; thestriated border {&tr.) is well seen, and the bright disk separating this from the cell-proto-plasm ; 11, nucleus with intranuclear network ; a, a thinned out wing-like projection ofthe cell which probably fitted between two adjacent cells. Fig. 41.—A ROW OF columnar cells from an intestinal villus op the RABBIT (E. A. S.). str, stria


Quain's elements of anatomy . Fig. 40.—Columnar epithelium cells of the rabbits intestine (E. A. S.).The cells have been isolated after maceration in very weak chromic acid. Theyare much vacuolated, and one of them (2) lias a fat-globule near its attached end ; thestriated border {&tr.) is well seen, and the bright disk separating this from the cell-proto-plasm ; 11, nucleus with intranuclear network ; a, a thinned out wing-like projection ofthe cell which probably fitted between two adjacent cells. Fig. 41.—A ROW OF columnar cells from an intestinal villus op the RABBIT (E. A. S.). str, striated border; w, smaller cells between the epithelium cells, probably of thenature of pale blood- or lymph-corpuscles. from the surface each cell has a polygonal outline, the cells beingflattened where they touch, from mutual compression, so that thusagain a mosaic pattern is produced. Columnar epithelium cells vaiymuch in form, in dimensions, and even in structure. Those which maybe looked upon as typical are of a long


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Keywords: ., boo, bookcentury1800, booksubjectanatomy, booksubjecthumananatomy