A compleat treatise of the muscles as they appear in humane body, and arise in dissection with diverse anatomical observations not yet discover'd : illustrated by near fourty copper-plates, accurately delineated and engraven / by John Browne ...

About this Item

Title
A compleat treatise of the muscles as they appear in humane body, and arise in dissection with diverse anatomical observations not yet discover'd : illustrated by near fourty copper-plates, accurately delineated and engraven / by John Browne ...
Author
Browne, John, 1642-ca. 1700.
Publication
In the Savoy :: Printed by Tho. Newcombe for the author,
1681.
Rights/Permissions

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Subject terms
Muscles.
Human anatomy -- Early works to 1800.
Link to this Item
http://name.umdl.umich.edu/A29838.0001.001
Cite this Item
"A compleat treatise of the muscles as they appear in humane body, and arise in dissection with diverse anatomical observations not yet discover'd : illustrated by near fourty copper-plates, accurately delineated and engraven / by John Browne ..." In the digital collection Early English Books Online. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A29838.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed June 13, 2024.

Pages

Page 60

Cricoarytaenoides Posticus.

BY Spigelius this is reckoned as one of the first pair of the Larynx,* 1.1 extending or opening its Cleft, and by Casse∣rius it is called Par Cucullare, it ariseth Fleshy from the hinder and lower part of the Cricoides, and running up with right Fibres, and repleating the Cavity of the Cricoides, is Nervously implanted into the inner seat of the Arytaenoides,* 1.2 and by division of the Two Arytaenoidal Cartilages, the Larynx is opened. This doth extend the Arytaenois, and by converting it backwards to the outward parts, it opens the Epiglot.

D. D. Shews this at Tab. 9. Fig. 1. G. G. Shews the same laid bare, Tab. ejusd. Fig. 2. C. C. Shews the same, Fig. 4. ejusd. Tab.

Page [unnumbered]

Notes

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