. Kirkes' handbook of physiology . Fig. 435- -Membranous Labyrinth of a 30 mm. Human Fetus. A, Viewed from its LateralAspect; B, viewed from the mesial aspect. (Streeter.) responds generally with the form of the osseous labyrinth, so far as regardsthe vestibule and semicircular canals, but is separated from the walls of theseparts by perilymph, except where the nerves enter into connection within labyrinth is a closed membrane containing endolymph. The Utriculus and the Sacculus. The vestibular portion of the inner earconsists of membranous sacs, the upper, the utriculus, the lower call


. Kirkes' handbook of physiology . Fig. 435- -Membranous Labyrinth of a 30 mm. Human Fetus. A, Viewed from its LateralAspect; B, viewed from the mesial aspect. (Streeter.) responds generally with the form of the osseous labyrinth, so far as regardsthe vestibule and semicircular canals, but is separated from the walls of theseparts by perilymph, except where the nerves enter into connection within labyrinth is a closed membrane containing endolymph. The Utriculus and the Sacculus. The vestibular portion of the inner earconsists of membranous sacs, the upper, the utriculus, the lower called thesacculus. The former is connected with the semicircular canals, the latterwith the cochlea by the cochlear canal. The utriculus and the sacculus haveon their floors a special patch of sensory epithelium called the macula:. Thefibers of the vestibular divisions of the auditory nerve end in the maculae, THE COCHLEA AND THE OIKJAN OF CORTI l!)


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900, booksubjectphysiology, bookyear1