The physiology of the circulation in plants : in the lower animals, and in man : being a course of lectures delivered at surgeons' hall to the president, fellows, etc of the Royal college of surgeons of Edinburgh, in the summer of 1872 . PHYSIOLOGY OF THE CIRCULATION. Ill Fio 78.—Bloodvessels of intestinal villi, magnified (human), a, a, Arteries. v,v, Veins, Tlie. arteryami vein in each villus conducts to an intermediate capillary plexus or network. (Compare with«,/, of Fig. 57, B ; with d, e,f, of Fig. 70, A ; and with Fig. 78, A, C.)—From injection by Lieburkiikn. Fig. 74.—Network of capill


The physiology of the circulation in plants : in the lower animals, and in man : being a course of lectures delivered at surgeons' hall to the president, fellows, etc of the Royal college of surgeons of Edinburgh, in the summer of 1872 . PHYSIOLOGY OF THE CIRCULATION. Ill Fio 78.—Bloodvessels of intestinal villi, magnified (human), a, a, Arteries. v,v, Veins, Tlie. arteryami vein in each villus conducts to an intermediate capillary plexus or network. (Compare with«,/, of Fig. 57, B ; with d, e,f, of Fig. 70, A ; and with Fig. 78, A, C.)—From injection by Lieburkiikn. Fig. 74.—Network of capillary vessels (i), with orifices of utricular glands (a), as seen on surfaceof mucous membrane of human uterus (magnified). (Compare with same letters in Fig. 75.)—Farre. Here, then, I submit, we have the elements Fi 75> out of which the placenta, when it exists, isformed, viz.,—two pieces of skin, or what isequivalent thereto, displaying innumerableeminences and depressions, an inconceivablenumber of capillary loops, and a vast array ofutricular glands corresponding to sweat, gas- &trie, intestinal, and other glands of that type(Fig. 57, B). The mucous lining of the uterus IJ*^gj*SS&-ftdisplays a remarkably r


Size: 1789px × 1397px
Photo credit: © The Reading Room / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1870, booksubjectblo, booksubjectblood