. The American journal of anatomy. the right side. Further, the convexity of the leftoccipital lobe is fuller than that of the right. Viewed laterally, thedorsal curve of the cerebrum is more pronounced than that of either Atana or Nooktah, and the hemicerebral mass does not taper somarkedly toward the occipital pole. Both insulaj are exposed, the leftmore than the right. The callosum, whose length is per cent ofthe total cerebral length, presents the same outline on cross-section asnoted in the other brains. The slight curvature and higher dorsal situation of the calcarine-postcalcarine,


. The American journal of anatomy. the right side. Further, the convexity of the leftoccipital lobe is fuller than that of the right. Viewed laterally, thedorsal curve of the cerebrum is more pronounced than that of either Atana or Nooktah, and the hemicerebral mass does not taper somarkedly toward the occipital pole. Both insulaj are exposed, the leftmore than the right. The callosum, whose length is per cent ofthe total cerebral length, presents the same outline on cross-section asnoted in the other brains. The slight curvature and higher dorsal situation of the calcarine-postcalcarine, noted especially in Atana, is here likewise indicated. While differing in considerable degree from the other Eskimo brainsin that its complexity of fissuration is much less, due doubtless to thesubjects youth, this brain must appear to the trained eye as presentinga very different configuration from what one is accustomed to see inthe brains of whites. This cerebral physiognomy—we may venture 56 Encephalic Anatomy of the Races. Fig. 13. Brain of Avia; lateral view of the left hemicerebnim.


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900, booksubjectanatomy, bookyear1901