GENERAL INDEX. 



333 



Crassamentum, (continued.) 



a sac in, containing coagulable fluid, 



49. 

 florid colour of surface of, owing to 



air, 71. 

 and serum, heat most favorable to 



their separation, 71. 

 red, a small portion of, in the thoracic 



duct, 277. 

 CRAWFORD, Dr., on the colour of the blood, 



10. 



Crocodile, chyle of, white, 147. 

 CRUICKSH ANK, Mr., a lecturer on anatomy 



at Windmill street, xvi. 

 on the supposed mouths of the lac- 

 teals in the villi, 181. 

 on the structure of the breast, 191. 

 on the size of the lymphatic glands 



at different ages, 246. 

 Cruor, drained of serum, specific gravity 



of, 73. See Crassamentum. 

 Crust, inflammatory or pleuritic, 30. See 



Buffy Coat of the Blood. 

 CULLEN, Dr., cited on blood not coagu- 

 lable, 69 ; referred to on the sero- 

 sity, 79. 

 Curd, of fresh salmon, converted into oily 



matter, 86. 



CUVIER, on fishes in hot springs, 27. 

 Cyclostomatous fishes, blood-corpuscles of, 

 234 ; the spleen wanting in some, 

 283. 



DANGER, M., on absorption of poison by 



branches of the portal vein, 180. 

 DAVIES, Dr. RICHARD, on the buffy coat, 

 crassamen, and coagulation of the 

 blood, xxxv. 



on the proportion of serum and clot 

 of the blood, xxxv. 



considered the gluten thinned in in- 

 flammation, xxxv. 



on the specific gravity of different 

 parts of the blood, xxxv-vi. 



supposed that he first discovered the 

 gluten or self-coagulating matter, 

 xxxvi. 



his clear demonstration of the three 

 parts of the blood, xl, xli. 



date of his researches, notice of his 

 tables of sp. gravities, and of his 

 epistle to STEPHEN HALES, xl. 



his distinction of the parts of the 

 blood adopted by HEWSON, FOR- 

 DYCE, and the HUNTERS, xli-ii. 



on the contraction of the fibrin press- 

 ing out the serum from the blood- 

 clot, 1. 



on the buffy coat of the blood, xxxv, 

 60. 



DAVY, Dr. JOHN, his historical notices on 

 the coagulation of the blood, xxv. 

 on the three parts of the blood, and 

 on the liquid, viscid, and solid 

 states of fibrin, xlii. 

 on the specific gravity of blood first 

 and last flowing from slaughtered 

 animals, and in acute and chronic 

 diseases, 2. 



on the effects of warmth on coagula- 

 tion of the blood, 4. 



on the colour of the blood, 8, 9, 10. 



on the effects of salts and other mat- 

 ters on coagulation of blood, 12. 



on the effect of agitation on the coa- 

 gulation of the blood, 16. 



on blood remaining fluid many hours 

 after death, 17. 



on effect of cold on coagulation, 18. 



on the effects of freezing and of thaw- 

 ing the blood on its coagulation, 19. 



on leeches reviving after having been 

 frozen, 19. 



on the effects of air, of a vacuum, of 

 carbonic acid, and of oxygen, on 

 the coagulation of blood, 20. 



on the effect of lightning on the 

 coagulation of blood and contrac- 

 tility of muscle, 20. 



on broken blood-clot in the heart, 24. 



on some cases of high animal heat, 27. 



on buffy blood, 34. 



on the serum of buffy blood, 38. 



on the coagulation of blood from 

 slaughtered animals, 44. 



on the blood of torpid animals, 53. 



on cases in which the blood did not 

 coagulate, 68. 



on the specific gravity of different 

 parts of the blood, 73. 



on the specific gravity of serum, 78. 



on the effect of rennet on serum, 80. 



on the increase of oil in the liver of 

 the cod-fish after keeping, 86. 



suggests, according to the old opi 

 nion, that the chyle of birds may 

 enter the circulation by the mesen- 

 teric veins, 87. 



on the chyme of the pheasant, 87. 



analysis of nucleoli of cells, 88. 



on the coagulation of the fluid of 

 lymphatic vessels, 159. 



on transudation through membranes, 

 169. 



ontheblood-corpusclesoftheechidna, 

 218. 



on the blood-corpuscles of a hum- 

 ming-bird, 219. 



on the viscidity of the red corpuscles 

 of the blood, 221. 



on a red clot in the thoracic duct, 277. 



