BIBLIOGRAPHY. 367 



geueous mass in which indistinct striations are to be seen. 

 This is of the nature of a cuticular formation, and probably 

 acts as a damper, preventing excessive vibrations of the organ 

 of Corti. 



BIBLIOGRAPHY. 



RUEDINGER. The Eustachian Tube, etc. Strieker's Histology, New York. 1872. 

 TRAUTMANN. Der gelbe Fleck am Ende des Hammergriffes. Arch. f. Ohreuheilk., 



Vol. XL, p. 99. 1876. 

 UKBANTSCHITSCH. Zur Anat. d. Gehorknochelchen des Menchen. Arch. f. Ohren- 



heilk., Vol. XL, p. 1. 1876. 

 POLITZKR. Ueber Anastoraosen d. Gefassbezirk d. Mittelohres u. d. Labyrinths. 



Arch. f. Ohrenh., Vol. XL, p. 237, 1877, and Wien. med. Woch., No. 30. 1876. 

 UEBER-LIEL. Die Membrana tympani secundaria. Monatsschr. f. Ohrenheilkunde, 



No. 4. 1876. 

 LAVDOWSKY. Ueber d. akust. Endapparat d. Saugethiere. Arch. f. mikros. 



Anat., Vol. XIII., p. 417. 1877. 

 KUIIN. Untersuch. iiber den hautigen Labyrinth der Knochenfische. Arch. f. inikr. 



Anat., Vol. XIV., p. 234. 1877. 

 MOLDENHAUER. Beitr. zur. Anat. u. Entwickel. d. Menschl. Gehororganes. 



Arch. f. Ohrenheilkunde, Vol. XL, p. 225. 1877. 

 DORAN. Morphology of the Mammalian Ossicula Auditus. Trans. Linn. Soc. , 



London, Second series, Vol. I. 1877. 

 UEBER-LIEL. Der Aqueductus cochleae beim Menschen. Monatsschr. f. Ohrenheilk., 



Vol. XIII., No. 3, p. 33, 1878-79, and Virch. Arch., Vol. LXXVII., p. 207, 



1879; also Arch. f. Anat. u. Phys., Phys. Abtheilung, p. 188. 1878. 

 CISOFF. Ueber d. Gehorlabyrinth d. Knorpelfische. Sitz. d. Naturf. Gesellsch. an 



d. K. Universit. zu Kasan. May, 1879. (Russian.) 

 PRITCHARD. The Organ of Corti in Mammals. The Lancet, 1876, p. 552, and 



Proc. Roy. Soc., Vol. XXIV., No. 168, p. 346, 1878 ; also The Termination of 



the Nerves in the Vestibule and Semicircular Canals of Mammals. Quart. 



Journ. Micros. Sc., New Series, No. 64, Vol. XXL, p. 398 1879. 

 MINOT, C. S. Recent Investigations of the Histology of the Scala Media Cochleae. 



American Journal of Otology. April, 1881. 



