APPEND! 



work, though on the It-It is a complete membrane, 

 antl near to the stomach of the sau incomes 



of a considerable thickness, efpct i.illv < 

 the two !,i>t bags of tin li. It has little or 



no fat, e\eept \vhat slightly covers the \cv#\ 

 particular parts. It is attar! Is, all along, 



to the lower part of the different hags uhi li . 

 stitute the stomach, and on the right to the root 

 of the mesentery, between the .stomach and trans- 

 vci-Ne arch of the colon, first behind the trans- 



t arch of the colon and root of the intsein 

 then to the posterior .surface of the left or 

 bag of the stomach, behind the anterior alt 

 ment, In some of this tribe there i-, the us&l 

 passage behind the vessels g- the 1 



common to all quadrupeds I am acquaint! 

 but in others, as the small Hottlc-no>c, th 

 such passage, which by the ca\ ind tin- 



stomach in the epiploon of this animal becomes m 

 circumscribed ca\-ity. 



The .spleen is involved in the epiploon, .md i- 

 \erv Miiall tor the size of the animal. Thf re arc 

 in .some, as in the Porp- > small ones, 



about the size of a nutmeg, often smaller, placed 

 in the epiploon behind the otl; These are 

 sometime* met with in the human lx>. 



The kidneys in the \\l\n\ <>: ti M tril)c of ani- 

 mals are conglomerated, !>< iller 

 parts, which are on > llular mem- 

 brane, blood-vessels, and ducts or infundil. 

 but not partially connected by contin *ob- 

 >tance, as in the human body, the ox. Ac. < 



