. The American journal of anatomy. ietal gyres is difii-cult to describe. One prominent fissure (called by Schiifer (in QuainsAnatomy) the ascending second temporal, but whose origin is probablytraceable to the primitive exoccipital) is confluent cephalad with the super-temporal just where the latter changes its course in the dorsal situation is not unlike that in the other Eskimo brains, particularlythat of Nooktah, and the right half of Kishu. A tri-radiate fissure,doubtless an exoccipital segment (Figure 1, EOP) curves around the caudalramus of the paroccipital, and is sei^ara
. The American journal of anatomy. ietal gyres is difii-cult to describe. One prominent fissure (called by Schiifer (in QuainsAnatomy) the ascending second temporal, but whose origin is probablytraceable to the primitive exoccipital) is confluent cephalad with the super-temporal just where the latter changes its course in the dorsal situation is not unlike that in the other Eskimo brains, particularlythat of Nooktah, and the right half of Kishu. A tri-radiate fissure,doubtless an exoccipital segment (Figure 1, EOP) curves around the caudalramus of the paroccipital, and is sei^arated from the postcalcarine by anarrow gyre. Mesial Surface.—The precuneal fissure is a zygon, not confluent withany other fissure. Further dorsad there is a fissure joining the occipital,which traverses the dorsi-mesal margin, previously alluded to as a pos-sible adoccipital. ^A similar condition misled Sperino in his description of the brain of the Anato-mist Giacomini. See the authors paper, Phila. Med. Jour., August 24, Fig. 3. Brain of Atuiia; dorsal view.
Size: 1856px × 1347px
Photo credit: © The Reading Room / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No
Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900, booksubjectanatomy, bookyear1901