. The American journal of anatomy. Fig. 13. Stomachs of: A, Sus(from Oppel, after Greenwood); B,Dicotyles (from Oppel, after Edel-mann). E. E. Bensley 141. epitlielium Ihroiigli which ordinary fundus and pyloric glands cardiac glands are restricted in distribution or absent. Specializa-tion is however manifested in the subdivision of the stomach by anexternal groove into right and left sacs connected on the outside by abroad tendinous band, and in the greatly increased thickness of thewall of the right or pyloric sac. There are no intermediate stagesamong the Edentata betweenthis cond


. The American journal of anatomy. Fig. 13. Stomachs of: A, Sus(from Oppel, after Greenwood); B,Dicotyles (from Oppel, after Edel-mann). E. E. Bensley 141. epitlielium Ihroiigli which ordinary fundus and pyloric glands cardiac glands are restricted in distribution or absent. Specializa-tion is however manifested in the subdivision of the stomach by anexternal groove into right and left sacs connected on the outside by abroad tendinous band, and in the greatly increased thickness of thewall of the right or pyloric sac. There are no intermediate stagesamong the Edentata betweenthis condition and the ex-tremely specialized stomachsof Manis and Bradypus (, B). In Manis javanica(Fig. 16), according to Weber,91, the whole stomach is linedby stratified epithelium. Thefundus glands are not, how-ever, entirely destroyed butare confined to a small portionof the greater curvature,where large compound glandswhich may be interpreted asevaginations of the mucousmembrane occur. The car-diac and pyloric glands arerepresented by highly branch-ed glands occupying the re-gion around the large com-plex fundus gland above de-scribed, the lesse


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900, booksubjectanatomy, bookyear1901