The encyclopdia britannica; a dictionary of arts, sciences, literature and general information . From Cat. England. Fig. OPT. CHI, 18.—Section of Brain of Turtle (Chelone).. From Cat. R. C. S. England. Fig. 17.—Section of the Brain of Porbeagle Shark (Lamna). structure, while in the floor in some species large anterior basalganglia or corpora striata are found (Miklucho-Maclay, Beitrdge Neurol., 1870; Edinger, Arch. mikr. Anat. Bd. Iviii., 1901,.661, Cerebellum). The Teleostean Fish are chiefly remarkableor the great development of the optic lobes and suppression of theolfactor


The encyclopdia britannica; a dictionary of arts, sciences, literature and general information . From Cat. England. Fig. OPT. CHI, 18.—Section of Brain of Turtle (Chelone).. From Cat. R. C. S. England. Fig. 17.—Section of the Brain of Porbeagle Shark (Lamna). structure, while in the floor in some species large anterior basalganglia or corpora striata are found (Miklucho-Maclay, Beitrdge Neurol., 1870; Edinger, Arch. mikr. Anat. Bd. Iviii., 1901,.661, Cerebellum). The Teleostean Fish are chiefly remarkableor the great development of the optic lobes and suppression of theolfactory apparatus. The pallium is non-nervous, and the optictracts merely cross one another instead of forming a process of the cerebellum called valvtda cerebelli projects into thecavity of each optic lobe (Rabl. Ruckhard, Arch. Anat. u. Phys.,1898, p. 345 [Pallium]; Haller, Morph. Jahrb. Bd. xxvi., 1898,p. 632 [Histology and Bibliography]). The brain of the Dipnoi, ormud fish, shows no very important developments, except that the fc wall of the pallium, which is probably the first indication of ahippocampal cortex or cortex of any kind (Osborn, Journ.


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, booksubjectencyclo, bookyear1910