. Quain's elements of anatomy . Fig. 56. ^-<-^^- ..f^^^^^^^if^i^^^^- ^^^^ £_ Fig. 56.—Cell-spaces of tendon of mouses tail, brought into view by treat-ment WITH nitrate of SILVER. 175 DIAMETERS, (E. A. S.) shallow pits on the surface, or in spaces—cell-spaces—entirely en-closed by the ground-substance, the spaces being for the most partrather larger than the contained cells, with which, however, they corre-spond on the whole in shape. These cell-spaces (the Saftkaniilchenof Recklinghausen, lym^^hatic canaliculi of Klein and Burdon-Sanderson)are brought into view when the tissue is stained w
. Quain's elements of anatomy . Fig. 56. ^-<-^^- ..f^^^^^^^if^i^^^^- ^^^^ £_ Fig. 56.—Cell-spaces of tendon of mouses tail, brought into view by treat-ment WITH nitrate of SILVER. 175 DIAMETERS, (E. A. S.) shallow pits on the surface, or in spaces—cell-spaces—entirely en-closed by the ground-substance, the spaces being for the most partrather larger than the contained cells, with which, however, they corre-spond on the whole in shape. These cell-spaces (the Saftkaniilchenof Recklinghausen, lym^^hatic canaliculi of Klein and Burdon-Sanderson)are brought into view when the tissue is stained with nitrate of silver,for they then look white upon the brown ground (figs. 55, 5G). FIBRES OF CONNECTIYE TISSUE. 59. White Fibres.—When examined nnder the microscope both the areolai:and fibrous tissues are seen to be principally made up of exceedingly fine,transparent, and appa-rently homogeneous fila- Fig- , from about -5 o-^g- to a-B-o-Q-o*^ 0^ ^^1 ^^^^^in thickness, or even less(fig. 57). These are Fig. 57.—Filaments op areo-lar TISSUE, IN LARGERAND SMALLER BUNDLES, ASSEEN UNDER A JIAGNIFYING]OWER OF 400 DIA3IETERS Sliarpey). seldom single, beingmostly united by meansof a small and usuallyimperceptible quantityof the ground-substanceinto bundles and filamen-tous laminfB of Tarioussizes, which to the naked eye appear as simple threads and films. Though the bundles mayintersect in every direction, the filaments of the same bundle run nearlyparallel to each other, and no one filament is ever seen to divide intobranches or to unite with another. The associated filaments take analternate bending or waving course as they proceed along the bundle,but stiU maintain their general parallelism.
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Keywords: ., boo, bookcentury1800, booksubjectanatomy, booksubjecthumananatomy