Contributions to the anatomy and development of the salivary glands in the mammalia . So00° Jo000 0 Q OV^ I. 2. 3- Fig. gland and submaxillary gland and submaxillary gland and sublingual sublingual glands. PRIMATE ALVEOLINGUAL SALIVARY AREA 149 primate series because it exhibits in the same individual all fivepotential components of the primate intermandibular salivary fieldcarried to full development in the adult. The observation is ofespecial importance because it proves, since both structures exist sideby side in th


Contributions to the anatomy and development of the salivary glands in the mammalia . So00° Jo000 0 Q OV^ I. 2. 3- Fig. gland and submaxillary gland and submaxillary gland and sublingual sublingual glands. PRIMATE ALVEOLINGUAL SALIVARY AREA 149 primate series because it exhibits in the same individual all fivepotential components of the primate intermandibular salivary fieldcarried to full development in the adult. The observation is ofespecial importance because it proves, since both structures exist sideby side in the same individual, that the gland here described as thesecondary submaxillary is not an exaggerated greater sublingual,whose duct joins the submaxillary duct, and whose body extendscaudad of the lingual nerve intersection, simulating the retro-lingual gland of Ranvier. In this form the main submaxillary gland (i) occupies the ty]3icalposition. The duct receives, above the mylohyoid, the drainage of a. Fig. 24. Schema of alveolingual salivary complex i/). ?(Part III, Fig. II.) 1. Submaxillary gland and duct. l. Secondary submaxillary gland and Accessory submaxillary gland and duct. 2. Greater sublingual gland and Lesser sublingual glands. dorsal accessory submaxillary gland (/)• It is paralleled, nearlythroughout its entire course, along the floor of the mouth along itsdorsal margin, by the duct of a secondary submaxillary gland (i)which joins it near the termination. In the same situation, on its lateral aspect, the main submaxillaryduct receives the duct of the greater sublingual gland (2), in conform-ity to the type of the primate group II, to which it belongs. Thesingle caruncular orifice of this animal drains, therefore, the followingindividual glandular components: — 1. Main gland (i). 2. Through the latters duct, an accessory submaxillary gland (/). 150 PRIMATE ALVEOLINGUAL SALIVARY AREA 3. The secondary submaxillary gland


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, booksubjectmammals, bookyear1913