. Bulletin of the Museum of Comparative Zoology at Harvard College. Zoology; Zoology. Willard: — Cranial Nerves of Anolis carolinensis. PLATE 5. Fig. 12. Transverse section (No. 767) through the mid-orbit region. The lingual and chorda tympani nerves are leaving the alveolar canal. No taste buds are found on the floor of the mouth, but they appear in the roof of the mouth among the median palatine glands, and to a less extent along the lateral glandular area. Different parts of the infraorbital plexus appear in the floor of the orbit. Fig. 13. Transverse section (No. 909) through orbit, showin


. Bulletin of the Museum of Comparative Zoology at Harvard College. Zoology; Zoology. Willard: — Cranial Nerves of Anolis carolinensis. PLATE 5. Fig. 12. Transverse section (No. 767) through the mid-orbit region. The lingual and chorda tympani nerves are leaving the alveolar canal. No taste buds are found on the floor of the mouth, but they appear in the roof of the mouth among the median palatine glands, and to a less extent along the lateral glandular area. Different parts of the infraorbital plexus appear in the floor of the orbit. Fig. 13. Transverse section (No. 909) through orbit, showing the connec- tion of the optic nerve with the retina. The chorda tympani is closely applied to the median side of the ramus alveolaris inferior. The muscle of the lower lid (dep. palb. if.) shows some of its fibers originating from the connective tissue near the median part of the roof of the mouth. Fig. 14. Transverse section (No. 988) through the anterior part of the optic chiasma (blue tint omitted), showing entrance of ciliary nerves into the eye- ball. The retina is cut tangentially; the infraorbital ganglion, the anterior part of the lachrymal gland, and the mechanism of the bursalis muscle in its relation to the ligament of the nictitating membrane, also fall in the plane of the section. Fig. 15. Transverse section (No. 1064), posterior to the orbit, through the posterior part of the optic chiasma (not lettered). The ciliary ganglion and the lachrymal plexus around a large post-lachrymal blood sinus are shown. The columella (epipterygoid) is cut where it articulates with the pterygoid Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble the original Harvard University. Museum of Comparative Zoology. Cambridge, Mass. : The Museum


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Keywords: ., bookauthorha, bookcentury1800, bookdecade1860, booksubjectzoology