. The physiology of domestic animals ... Physiology, Comparative; Veterinary physiology. BLOOD. 475 The most important constituent of the red blood-corpuscles, both in quantity and function, is the " ; Haemoglobin, or the blood coloring-matter, is a complicated, crystallizable albuminoid body containing iron, and forms about 90 per cent, of the red blood-cells. When separated from the corpuscles, haemoglobin readily crystallizes out 1 Mb,. Fig. 176.—Blood-Crystals of Max and Different Animals. (Thanhoffer and Frey.) I, hzemoglobin crystals; Mo, squirrel; Tr, guinea-pig ;


. The physiology of domestic animals ... Physiology, Comparative; Veterinary physiology. BLOOD. 475 The most important constituent of the red blood-corpuscles, both in quantity and function, is the " ; Haemoglobin, or the blood coloring-matter, is a complicated, crystallizable albuminoid body containing iron, and forms about 90 per cent, of the red blood-cells. When separated from the corpuscles, haemoglobin readily crystallizes out 1 Mb,. Fig. 176.—Blood-Crystals of Max and Different Animals. (Thanhoffer and Frey.) I, hzemoglobin crystals; Mo, squirrel; Tr, guinea-pig ; U, ground-mole ; L, horse; Em, man ; H, marmot; Ma, cat; T, cow; mv, from the venous blood of a eat. 2, haematin crystals; E, man; Vb, sparrow; M, eat. 3, hasmatoidin crystals from an old blood extravasation of man. of its solutions in serum when concentrated. These crystals have dif- ferent forms in different species of animals, depending, apparently, on varying amounts of water of crystallization. In the domestic animals they belong to the rhombic system ; those of the squirrel are hexagonal. The. 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 Smith, Robert Meade, 1854-. Chicago, A. Eger


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