Cranial Landmarks & Lines Of Cerebral Fissures

The cranial bones are the frontal, two parietal, two temporal, the occipital, the sphenoid, and the ethmoid, 1899. From 'The Treatise of the Human Anatomy and Its Applications to the Practice of Medicine and Surgery, Volume I' (1899). The great longitudinal fissure (or longitudinal cerebral fissure, or longitudinal fissure, or interhemispheric fissure) is the deep groove that separates the two hemispheres of the vertebrate brain. (Photo by VintageMedStock/Getty Images)
The cranial bones are the frontal, two parietal, two temporal, the occipital, the sphenoid, and the ethmoid, 1899. From 'The Treatise of the Human Anatomy and Its Applications to the Practice of Medicine and Surgery, Volume I' (1899). The great longitudinal fissure (or longitudinal cerebral fissure, or longitudinal fissure, or interhemispheric fissure) is the deep groove that separates the two hemispheres of the vertebrate brain. (Photo by VintageMedStock/Getty Images)
Cranial Landmarks & Lines Of Cerebral Fissures
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Credit:
VintageMedStock / Contributor
Editorial #:
150954143
Collection:
Archive Photos
Date created:
January 01, 1899
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Source:
Archive Photos
Object name:
T1676661_214
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