Principles and practice of operative dentistry . Section of osteodentin. (After Salter.) the situation of the normal dentin which had been removed by the pro-cess of resorption. Bodecker* has also described this form of new growth as secondarydentin with forms analogous to Haversian systems. Fig. Section of ost< I Colyer.) Occasionally the resorbed dentin will be replaced by bone. Fig. 501,which is taken from the Transactions of the Odontological Society ofGreat Britain, 1893, shows a section made from a partially erupted tooth, * Dental Cosmos, 1879. 396 OPERATIVE DENTISTRY. the root


Principles and practice of operative dentistry . Section of osteodentin. (After Salter.) the situation of the normal dentin which had been removed by the pro-cess of resorption. Bodecker* has also described this form of new growth as secondarydentin with forms analogous to Haversian systems. Fig. Section of ost< I Colyer.) Occasionally the resorbed dentin will be replaced by bone. Fig. 501,which is taken from the Transactions of the Odontological Society ofGreat Britain, 1893, shows a section made from a partially erupted tooth, * Dental Cosmos, 1879. 396 OPERATIVE DENTISTRY. the root of which had apparently been about two-thirds formed, and ap-peared as though it had been fractured, but upon microscopic examinationit was found that this appearance was due to resorption. The bone-tissueoccupies the cavity formed by the process of resorption.


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900, booksubjectdentist, bookyear1901