Page:A descriptive catalogue of the Warren Anatomical Museum.djvu/86

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64 HEALTHY ANATOMY.

659. The same ; from a leopard. 1862.

Boston Soc. of Natural History.

660. The same; from a woodchuck (Arctomys monax), and showing the great development of the caecum in the ro- dentia. By Mr. E. 1860.

Mr. R. T. Edes, med. student.

661. The same ; from an opossum. 1862.

662. The same; from a calf. 1860.

Dr. J. B. S. Jackson.

663. Portion of the small intestine of an East Indian elephant ; distended and dried, with the mesenteric arteries injected. By Dr. Winslow Lewis. 1847. Dr. J. C. Warren.

664. Portion of the intestine of an ostrich from New Holland ; inflated and dried, by Mr. G. The immense csecal appen- dages are shown, and the whole of the large intestine, which is very short. 1860.

Mr. Wm. B. Gibson, med. student.

Intestine of three large serpents. See 284-6. Two are entire. No. 285 cut open, and shows a remarkably valvu- lar-looking arrangement of the mucous membrane of both the small and large intestine. Caecum 1J in. deep, and opening freely into the intestine, but so closely connected with it, that externally it would very readily be over- looked.

665. Intestine of the salmon. One entire, and can be partially inflated. The other cut open to show the openings of the

appendices. Two specimens. 1860-1. Museum Fund.

IV. MALFORMATIONS. ' Stomach of a double calf. No. 898.

666-7. Diverticula. 1847. Dr. J. C. Warren.

668. The same ; 3 in. long, and about as large as the thumb ; 53 in. from caecum, and at an angle of 45 with the ileum. From a man aet. thirty-four. 1858. Dr. C. Ellis.

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