Carpenter's principles of human physiology . ture of the Spinal Cord in more detail thancan possibly be given in a general survey like the present, are referred to the importantwork published by Stilling in 1856, entitled Neue Untersuchungen liber den Bau desRuckenmarks, in 3 parts, with an atlas; also to the Untersuch. iiber den feineren Baudes Central Nerven-system des Menschen, by J. v. Lenhossek, Wien, 1855; to the researchesof Bidder and Kupffer, CJeber die Textur des Ruckenmarks, Leipzig, 1857; to the valuablepapers in the Philosophical Transactions for 1851, 1853, 1858, part i. p. 231,
Carpenter's principles of human physiology . ture of the Spinal Cord in more detail thancan possibly be given in a general survey like the present, are referred to the importantwork published by Stilling in 1856, entitled Neue Untersuchungen liber den Bau desRuckenmarks, in 3 parts, with an atlas; also to the Untersuch. iiber den feineren Baudes Central Nerven-system des Menschen, by J. v. Lenhossek, Wien, 1855; to the researchesof Bidder and Kupffer, CJeber die Textur des Ruckenmarks, Leipzig, 1857; to the valuablepapers in the Philosophical Transactions for 1851, 1853, 1858, part i. p. 231, 1859, part 437, by J. Lockhart Clarke; to the Translation by the Sydenham Society of the treatiseof Schroder v. d. Kolk, 1859; and to the essays of Dr. C. Frommann, Untersuch. lib. dieNorm. u. Path. Anat. des Ruckenmarks, Jena, 1S64, 4 plates ; the work of J. Luys,Recherches sur le Systeme Nerveux Cerebro-spinaI, Paris, 1865; Gerlach, in Striekers Human and Comp. Histology, Syd. Soc. Trans., 1872 p. 327; Pick, Centralblatt, 1878,p. A section of the Cord at the seat of the 3rd dorsal ,vertebra. The black central portion represents the tne Same or Of the Opposite Side STRUCTURE OF THE SPINAL CORD. 571 bound the anterior fissure, and the more externally situated proper or funda-mental fasciculus. The posterior column contains the fascicidus gracilis ofGoll (c) and the fasciculus cuneatus of Burdach (d). The lateral columnsare composed of the anterior (e) and the lateral mixed fasciculi (/), the pyra-midal fasciculus(^), and, lastly, (/*,) the lateral cerebellar fasciculus. Of these, aand g are the fasciculi which contain all the connecting fibres between thegrey substance of the Cord and the ganglion of the pes cerebri, which passonwards to the central convolutions of the cortex of the Cerebrum; h, com-posed of coarse fibres, connects Clarks column in the grey substance of theCord with the Cerebellum; b, e, and f are composed of fibres connecting thereflectorial centres
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1880, booksubjectphysiology, bookyear1