DescriptionEB1911 - Liver - Fig. 1.—The Liver from below and behind.jpg
English: The Liver from below and behind, showing the whole of the visceral surface and the posterior area of the parietal surface. The portal fissure has been slightly opened up to show the vessels passing through it; the other fissures are represented in their natural condition—closed. In this liver, which was hardened in situ, the impressions of the sacculations of the colon are distinctly visible at the colic impression. The round ligament and the remains of the ductus venosus are hidden in the depths of their fissures.
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The Liver from below and behind, showing the whole of the visceral surface and the posterior area of the parietal surface.
Uploaded a work by {{anonymous}} from ''Encyclopædia Britannica'' (11th ed.), v. 16, 1911, "Liver" article, pp. 801 ff.; modified from https://www.gutenberg.org/files/42173/42173-h/42173-h.htm#ar52 with UploadWizard