84 PROCEEDINGS OF THE ANATOMICAL AND ANTHROPOLOGICAL 



pancreas and duodenum, thus appearing to he the inferior pancreatico 

 duodenalis. The main artery then ran upwards and to the right to 

 the transverse fissure of the liver and was about 3 inches in length. 

 At this part it lay in the free margin of the lesser omentum and had 

 the following relations to the extreme right was the bile duct, the 

 secondary hepatic artery was posterior to the portal vein and slightly 

 to the right of it, while the normal hepatic artery was directly anterior 

 to the vein. At the transverse fissure the artery divided up into two 

 terminal branches supplying the right and left lobes. 



(Signature of observer) F. J. STUART. 



Date of observation, November, 1903. 

 Sex, Female. 



Meckel' s diverticulum. 



This case was very well marked and came off the intestine about 

 38 or 40 inches from the ileo-caecal valve. It was rather like the 

 thumb of a glove and was about 3 inches in length, 1^ inches at the 

 widest diameter and \\ inches at the widest circumference. When 

 first seen it seemed to be pointing to the middle of Poupart's ligament 

 on the left side. 



(Signature of observer) G. ERNEST SHAND. 



Date of observation, November, 1903. 

 Sex, Female. 



Abnormal liver. 



In this case the right lobe occupied the greater part of the right 

 lumbar region, forming what is known as a Riedel's lobe. The part 

 below the level of the fundus of gall-bladder measured 



From above down 2J inches. 



Antero-posteriorly (at level of gall-bladder) 3f or 4 inches. 



Transversely - 1| inches. 



This part was like a large tongue whose tip touched the highest 

 point of the iliac crest and whose dorsum was applied to the right 

 lateral wall of the abdomen. There was a depression about the 





