342 HOWARD AYERS 



tions of the four cranial nerves having endings in the nasal cham- 

 ber is very imperfect. Even more fragmentary and obscure is 

 our knowledge of their functions. 



Winding Way and Valley Road 

 Cincinnati, January 20, 1919 



LITERATURE CITED 



1 Van Wlihe, J. W. 1918. On the nervus terminalis from man to Amphioxus. 



Proceedings Koninkljke Akad. van Wetenschappen, vol. 21, No. 1 and 2. 



2 Ayers 1907 Vertebrate cephalogenesis — Amphioxus and Bdellostoma. 



3 LocY, William A. 1905 On a newly recognized nerve connected with the 



forebrain of selachians, Anat. Anz., Bd. 26 pp. 33-63, 111-123. Also 

 other papers by the same investigator. 



4 HxjBER, G. Carl AND Guild, Stacy R. 1913 Observations on the peripheral 



distribution of the nervus terminalis in Mammalia. Anat. Record, 

 vol. 7, pp. 253-272. 



5 Larsell, Olof. 1918 Studies on the nervus terminalis: Mammals. Jour. 



Comp. Neur., vol. 30, pp. 3-68. 



6 Brookover, C. 1914 The nervus terminalis in adult man. Jour. Comp. Neur., 



vol. 24, pp. 131-135. 



1917 The peripheral distribution of the nervus terminalis in an infant. 



Jour. Comp. Neur., vol. 28, pp. 349-360. 



