Surgical anatomy : a treatise on human anatomy in its application to the practice of medicine and surgery . marked off above by theparallel fissure. Its lower boundary is liy no means so constantly well marked,and it is frequently continuous with the inferior temporo-sphenoid is continuous posteriorly with the angular convolution. PLATE CCLXXIl. Collateral fissureFusiform lobuleUncus Inferior temporo-sphenoid fissure Superior temporo-sphenoid fissure Hippocampal fissureHiopocampal . convolution Optic commissureCrus cerebr. Parieto-occipitalfissu Lingual lobule Cuneus— Calcarine


Surgical anatomy : a treatise on human anatomy in its application to the practice of medicine and surgery . marked off above by theparallel fissure. Its lower boundary is liy no means so constantly well marked,and it is frequently continuous with the inferior temporo-sphenoid is continuous posteriorly with the angular convolution. PLATE CCLXXIl. Collateral fissureFusiform lobuleUncus Inferior temporo-sphenoid fissure Superior temporo-sphenoid fissure Hippocampal fissureHiopocampal . convolution Optic commissureCrus cerebr. Parieto-occipitalfissu Lingual lobule Cuneus— Calcarine fissure- Superior temporo-sphenoid gyrusddle temporo-sphenoid gyrusMiddle temporo-sphenoid fissureinferior temporo-sphenoid gyrus INFERIOR SURFACE OF OCCIPITAL AND TEMPORAL THE CEREBRUM. 495 Tlie inferior temporo-sphenoid convolution lies along the lateral margin of thehemisphere, between the middle temporo-sphenoid fissure and the inferior temporo-sphenoid fissure ; it passes above the preoccipital notch, and is continuous behindwith the third occipital coi:ivolution. Upon the basilar surface of the lobe it iscontinuous with the external occipito-temporal convolution, or fusiform lobule. The upper or Sylvian surface of the temporo-sphenoid lohe is in contact withthe operculum, and intimately related to the island of Reil; it presents two or threetransverse convolutions. The fissures and convolutions presenting on the basilar surface being continu-ous with those of the occipital lobe, they will be described as part of


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900, booksubjectanatomy, bookyear1901