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CHAP. IV. The Parts and some of the Contents of the separated Skull unfolded.
IT is not our intent, nor will it be necdful for us to delineate the figures and situation of the several Bones of the Brain-pan, or to describe their various holes, which transmit the Trunks of the Vessels like the hanging weights of a Clock. All these are well enough known; so that to treat of these Gates or Entties is superfluous. Besides also, by what means the Nerves, arising within the Skull with their ramification or branching forth, enters the dens and caverns of the Bones, shall be delivered particu∣larly afterwards. Wherefore for the present our business shall be only to take notice of some things, chiefly worth noting, concerning the sanguiferous Vessels passing through the Cuniform or Wedge-like Bone, not sufficiently noted by others.
Among the various uses and offices which the Cuniform or Wedge-like Bone yields to the Brain and its Appendix, it is not of the least note or moment, that it transmits the Carotidick Arteries, not with∣out a certain mechanical or artificial provision; and that in the middle way, by which they must pass, it contains the pituitary Kernel, and sometimes the wonderful Net. Each of these deserve consideration; the more, for that in divers Animals they are after a different manner; and because it is much contro∣verted among Physicians concerning their frame and use. But we will first speak of the pituitary Glandula, because this part, being placed higher, is observable to Anatomical Inspection before others.
The pituitary Glandula or snotty Kernel is hid within a proper Cell or stall, made hollow in the middle of the Wedge-like Bone, being shut up in the Chest sometimes more strictly, sometimes more loosly: For in a Dog, Cat, and some other Creatures, sticking to the Tunnel, it is pulled away toge∣ther with it when it is removed; and then its bulk consists of two Glandula's or Kernels distinct among themselves, and easily to be separated one from another. But in a Calf, Sheep, Hog, and many others, it is strictly included on every side, except where it admits the Tunnel, and clothed with the hard Me∣ninx or dura Mater, and with its coverings shut up between the cavity of the Bone. Besides, in these, its frame or substance seems but one and undivided, though, in truth, it is made up of a substance which is of a twofold nature or kind.
This Glandula is found in all perfect Creatures; for Man, all four-footed Beasts, yea Fowl or Fishes are provided or endued with it: from whence we may conclude it to have some necessary uses in the Brain. But as to its quantity or bigness, its proportion is various in divers Animals, according to the bigness of the head and body wherein it is; because in a Lamb it is greater than in a Man or Dog; also Its bulk in a Horse is lesser than in an Ox. But the reason of this difference seems to consist in this chiefly, for that the pituitary Glandula in some, respects the bulk of the brain only laid upon it, and in others both the brain and the Carotidick Arteries ascending near it; and so as it hath a respect to both these together or only to one, its substance or bulk is either greater or lesser. For truly in some Animals the Carotidick Arteries being dilated within the Skull, are presently divaricated into Net-like infoldings, and from those infoldings many shoots of the Vessels every where enter this Glan∣dula, and are interwoven into its substance. Further, because this infolding of the Vessels, called the wonderful Net, is found very large in some, and in others very small; therefore this Kernel, for as much as it admits from these, few branches, and from those far more, and in some other Animals scarce any shoots from the Arteries, answers to this divers distribution of the Vessels, with the va∣rious proportion of its bulk. Because it is observed in some Animals, as chiefly in a Man and a Horse, that this wonderful Net is wholly wanting; and whereas in such, either Artery is carried about by a long compass between the recesses of this bone; from its trunk in a man sometimes one or two shoots, sometimes none, are carried into the pituitary Kernel; also in an Horse fewer branches en∣ter into it, and so its bulk in these becomes lesser.
But in very many other Animals (especially those who have the wonderful Net) it may be proved, besides ocular inspection, also by this Experiment, that many sanguiferous Vessels enter this Glandula; for if an inky liquor be squirted into the Carotides with a Syringe, the exterior part of the Glandula, that is interwoven with the blood-carrying Vessels, will be very much dyed with a black co∣lour. Wherefore without doubt, it may be thought, that this Glandula doth receive into it self the hu∣mors, to wit, flowing into it from the Tunnel in all kind of living Creatures, and in some from the branches of the Carotides. Yet by which way these humors are carried away again, doth not so plainly appear; for we affirm, with the most Learned Schneider, that they do not at all fall down into the Palate through the holes of the under-lying bone. Yet in the mean time, we suppose those holes to be only made to procure lightness to the bone; because in those Animals, which have the greater pituitary Kernel, those holes in the bone are more and larger: further, I have often found Vessels or Chanels to be contained between those holes; and when I had injected Ink within