A Manual of the dissection of the human body

Couverture
R. M. De Witt, 1868 - 588 pages
 

Table des matières

Expressions et termes fréquents

Fréquemment cités

Page 310 - Its root, the part connected with the vertebral column, is narrow, about six inches in length, and directed obliquely from the left side of the second lumbar vertebra, to the right sacro-iliac symphysis.
Page 35 - Scalenus anticus, in part continuous with the rectus anticus major, arises from the anterior tubercles of the transverse processes of the third, fourth, fifth, and sixth cervical vertebrae...
Page 61 - Gland, the largest, is situated in front of the external ear, and behind the angle of the jaw.
Page 300 - A line drawn from a point midway between the anterior superior spine of the ilium and the symphysis pubis...
Page 2 - ... a line drawn from the angle of the jaw to the middle of the clavicle.
Page 81 - In this position it lies behind the vertebral artery. It is by no means uncommon to find it more or less completely fused over the neck of the first rib with the first thoracic ganglion.
Page 222 - ... of the little finger and the ulnar side of the ring finger.
Page 179 - From twelve to fifteen olfactory filaments pass through the foramina in the cribriform plate of the ethmoid bone.
Page 474 - The tendon changes its direction at two points: first, behind the external malleolus; secondly, on the outer side of the cuboid bone ; in both of these situations the tendon is thickened, and in...
Page 470 - Adductor obliquus pollicis, and is inserted into the inner side of the base of the first phalanx with this muscle.

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