The Anatomy of the Human Peritoneum and Abdominal Cavity / Considered from the Standpoint of Development and Comparative Anatomy

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PREFACE.

CONTENTS.

INTRODUCTION.

PART I. ANATOMY OF THE PERITONEUM AND ABDOMINAL CAVITY.

PART II. ANATOMY OF THE PERITONEUM IN THE SUPRA-COLIC COMPARTMENT OF THE ABDOMEN.

PART III. LARGE AND SMALL INTESTINE, ILEO-COLIC JUNCTION AND CAECUM.

PART IV. MORPHOLOGY OF THE HUMAN CAECUM AND VERMIFORM APPENDIX.

INDEX.

Transcriber’s notes:

In this transcription, hyperlinking has been applied to page references, as well as references to illustrations and footnotes. Hyperlinks are indicated by black dotted underlines (plus aqua highlighting when the mouse pointer hovers over them). Page numbers are shown in the right margin. The footnotes, which are located at the end of the book, are themselves hyperlinked back to the originating marker to facilitate easy return to the text. A red dashed underline indicates the presence of a transcriber’s comment; scrolling the mouse pointer over such text will reveal the comment.

Errors and inconsistencies:
The text contains numerous inconsistencies of hyphenation. A few have been adjusted where there was clear evidence of a preferred style (e.g. meso-colic-->mesocolic and meso-duodenum-->mesoduodenum) but most have been left in their original format.

A few spelling typos have been corrected silently (e.g. improtant-->important, mecocolon-->mesocolon) and missing letters have been inserted inside square brackets (e.g. junct[i]on, t[r]ansverse). Some spelling inconsistencies possibly represent contemporarily acceptable spelling alternatives (e.g. coati/coaiti, mesal/mesial, prÆcava/precava, hyÆna/hyena). The term STOMADÆUM is incorrectly spelt as STOMADŒUM in Figs. 27 and 101, and Fig. 250 has an incorrect label on the R. vitelline vein.

A small number of punctuation inconsistencies have been corrected silently by insertion of missing punctuation or deletion of redundant punctuation.

The abbreviation viz. appears inconsistently in both roman and italic font.

Illustrations:
The book contains 582 variously-sized illustrations that were originally clustered into 300 plates dispersed in groups throughout the book. Scans of the images were irregularly discoloured, unevenly illuminated and varied in their size and resolution. Except for the largest images, which have been reduced, their relative sizes have been retained and the cleaned up images have been relocated close to their relevant mention in the text. Their number and varied size posed challenges for creating a layout that could be viewed and read comfortably – a browser width of 1000-1100 pixels is optimal, and some browsers display them more clearly than others. Sharp-eyed readers will note that references in the text to image labels such as X, A, B, 1, 2, etc. are not consistently styled (roman/italic, upper/lower case).

Table of Contents:
The numbering system and font styling of the TOC is not consistent within the TOC nor with the corresponding headings in the text, and some TOC entries correspond to in-line text rather than to true headings. No attempt has been made to remedy these inconsistencies. One missing TOC entry has been inserted.

Index:
The index is shown as it originally appeared – with some entries not in correct alphabetic sequence.




THE ANATOMY
OF THE
HUMAN PERITONEUM
AND
ABDOMINAL CAVITY

CONSIDERED FROM THE STANDPOINT OF DEVELOPMENT
AND COMPARATIVE ANATOMY


BY
GEORGE S. HUNTINGTON, M.A., M.D.
PROFESSOR OF ANATOMY, COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS, COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY,
NEW YORK CITY



ILLUSTRATED WITH 300 FULL-PAGE PLATES CONTAINING
582 FIGURES, MANY IN COLORS


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LEA BROTHERS & CO.
PHILADELPHIA AND NEW YORK
1903



Entered according to the Act of Congress, in the year 1903, by
LEA BROTHERS & CO.,
In the Office of the Librarian of Congress. All rights reserved

                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                           

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