The nervus terminalis in man and mammals
โ Scribed by Johnston, J. B.
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1914
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 801 KB
- Volume
- 8
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0003-276X
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
NINE FIGURES
I t is over nineteen years since Pinkus ('94) first called attention to a 'new nerve' attached to the telencephalon of Protopterus, and thirty-five years since the first record of this nerve having been seen in a shark (Fritsch '78). The forms in which this nerve has now been recorded and its chief characters have been briefly summarized in the writer's previous communication ('13).
In that paper the existence of a true nervus terminalis in human and certain mammalian embryos was clearly established. A t the
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
## Abstract The origin of the nervus terminalis is one of the least well understood developmental events involved in generating the cranial ganglia of the forebrain in vertebrate animals. This cranial nerve forms at the formidable interface of the anteriormost limits of migrating cranial neural cre
A ganglionated nerve connected with the forebrain and intimately associated with the nervus olfactorius has been described in nearly all groups of fishes. The first clear description of such a nerve is that of Pinkus ('94) for Protopterus. It was termed the nervus terminalis by Locy, i n 1905, and a