THE NERVOUS SYSTEM 



II 9 



Fig. 104. — Large Nerve Trunk, 

 such as supplies the muscles. 

 Cross-section (magnified 6 diam- 

 eters), showing bundles of nerve 

 fibers. (Peabody.) 



called protoplasm. The protoplasm in nerve cells possesses 



the most marvelous and varied powers of any known sub- 

 stance, for the nerve cells are 



the seat of the mind. 



Nerve Cells and Fibers. — 



The many branches of nerve 



cells make them the most 



remarkable of all cells for 



irregularity in shape. Since 



the protoplasm of the cell con- 

 tinues into the fibers, it is 



plainly wrong to consider the 



nerve cell as something apart 



from its fibers. It is not a 



complete cell without them. 



A cell usually has many short 



branches called dendrons or 



dendrites (see Fig. 103) for communicating 

 with near-by cells, and one long branch 

 called an axon (Fig. 103) for communicat- 

 ing with distant parts. The axons form 

 the fibers that go to the skin, muscles, 

 and other organs. 



A Nerve. — These long branches, or 



axons, of nerve cells go all over the body 



and are often bound together into visible 



jfijjj cords called nerves, or nerve trunks (Fig. 



104). 



White and Gray Fibers (Fig. 105). — 

 Some fibers have a fatty covering sur- 



FlG. 105. — c, a white j s a 



fiber with its fatty rounding the thread of protoplasm ; they 

 sheath (dark) ; d, are w }-,j te an( j glistening, and are called 



two gray fibers 



(without sheath), white fibers. Others are without this fatty 



ill 



