258 



Index to Notes. 



P'luids, of body, ii. 7. 4, ii. 2. I. 



Flying, resemblance to swimming, i. 4. I. 



Foetus, perhaps dissected by A., i. 5* ^ 5 

 heart visible on third day, iii.4. 2 ; viscera, 

 iii. 4. 4 ; marrow, ii. 6. 2 ; brain, ii. 7. 

 4 ; deficient pigment, ii. 6. 3. 



Functions, and properties, ii. i. 9 ; have 

 separate organs when possible, iv. 6. 15 ; 

 sometimes accumulated in single organ, 

 ii. 16. 5 and 12 ; precede organs, ii. 16. 



13, iv. 10. 14. 



Food, iii. 5. 5; is fluid, ii. 2, 4. 

 Foot, large in man, iv. 10. 46. 



Galen, as to lacteals, ii. 3. 1 1 ; calls brain 

 almost fluid, ii. 7. 4 ; says vessels are 

 small in fat men, ii. 5. 8 ; ridicules A.'s 

 view of the brain, iii. 6. 3 ; and of sinews, 

 iii. 4. 20 ; and of the heart's cavities, iii. 

 4. 23 ; on heart of elephant, iii. 4. 22 ; 

 on gills of fishes, ii. 16. 8 ; on position 

 of heart, iii. 4. I7 ; on its hard flesh, iii. 



4. 37 ; on sutures of skull, ii. 7. 23 ; 

 locates blood formation in liver, iii. 4. 

 15 ; said to have visited Egypt, ii. 7. 26. 



Gall-bladder, wanting in some animals, 

 iv. 2. 7 ; variable, iv. 2. 8 ; reasons for 

 absence, iv. 3. i ; of serpents, iv. 2. I ; 

 of fishes, iv. 2. 3 and 4 ; of seal, iv. 2. 7 ; 

 of sheep in Naxos, iv. 2. 9. 



Gallinacese, ii. 13- I. 



Gasteropods, position of mouth and anus, 

 iv. 9. 7 ; proboscis, iv. 5. 27 ; crop, iv. 



5. 28 ; liver, iv. 5. 29 ; operculum, iv. 

 5.31. 6Vif Testacea. 



Gazelle, iii. 2. 6 and 17. 



General sense, iv. 10. 8. 



Genus, and species, i. I. 2. 



Gills, do not co-exist with lung, iv. 13. 40. 



See Fishes. 

 Giraff"e, not known to A., iii. 2. 15. 

 Grasshopper, legs of, iv. 6. 18. 

 Great vessel, iii. 4. 24. 

 Grebe, foot of, iv. 12. 8. 



Haemorrhage, active and passive, iii. 5. Ii. 

 Hair, how formed, ii. 15. 4 ; of head, ii. 



14. 6 ; correlated with teeth, etc., ii. 14. 

 4 ; correlated with skin, ii. 13. 7. 



Hand, in place of many organs, iv. 10. 15. 

 Hare, its rennet, iii. 15. 2; its food, iii. 



'5- 5- ... ^ 



Hartbeeste, ni. 2. o. 



Hawk, legs in flight, iv. 12. 25. 



Health, and Disease, how far part of 

 natural philosophy, ii. 7. 14 ; causes of, 

 ii. 2. 10. 



Hearing, medium of, ii. i. 12, ii. 10. 10. 



Heart, is homogeneous and also hetero- 

 geneous, ii. I. 16 ; how nourished, ii. i. 

 18 ; early formation of, iii. 4. 2 ; formed 

 before blood, ii. i. 17 ; its cavities and 

 anatomy, iii. 4. 23 ; inconsistent state- 

 ments about, iii. 4. 26 ; at first unilocular, 

 iii. 4. 30 ; left ventricle the supreme 

 part, iii. 4. 29 ; its chordae tendineae, iii. 

 4. 20 ; bone in, iii. 4. 22 ; position of 



in man, iii. 4. 17 ; of hare, iii. 4. 32 ; of 

 fishes, iii. 4. 19 ; of testacea, iv. 5. 67 ; 

 of insects, iv. 5. 69; its central position; 

 iv. 5. 59 ; relation to lung and wind- 

 pipe, iii. 3. 9 ; disease of, iii. 4. 37 ; its 

 action, iii. '6. 7 ; is centre of vascular 

 system and seat of blood formation, iii. 

 4. 5 ; main but not sole seat of vital 

 heat, ii. 3. 4 ; the .source of motion, iii. 

 4. 20 ; why held to be the sensorium 

 commune, ii. 7. 27 ; connection with 

 sense-organs, ii. 10. 19, ii. 10 9 ; special 

 relation to touch and taste, ii. 10. 10 ; 

 sympathy with brain, ii. 7. 27; throbs in 

 emotion, iii. 4. 13; ignored by A.'s pre- 

 decessors, iii. 4. 5. 



Heat, and cold, ii. 2. 15 ; vital distinct 

 from ordinary, ii. 6. 7 ; vital is chiefly 

 in heart, ii. 3. 4 ; mounts upwards, ii. 

 7. 20 ; of male and female, ii. 2. 9, ii. 

 7. 19; affects different persons differently, 

 ii. 2. 12 ; is instrument of soul, i. I. 13, 

 iii. 5. 3, iv. 10; II ; is cause of digestion, 

 "• 3- 3 ; promotes growth, ii. 7. 20 ; is 

 cause of blood's fluidity, ii. 9. i ; how 

 regulated, iii. 6. 3. 



Heavens, not generated, i. I. 21. 



Hemiptera, rostrum of, iv. 5. 76. 



Hepatic vessels, iii. 7. Ii. 



Heracleotic crabs, iv. 8. 2. 



Herodotus, ii. 6. 6, ii. 7. 26, ii. 16. 4, 

 iii. 2. I. 



Heron, tail, iv. 12. 24 ; neck, iv. 12. 26. 



Hippardium, iii. 2. 15. 



Hippocrates, source of Plato's physiology, 

 ii. 10. 8 ; on digestion, ii. 3. 3 ; on 

 brain, ii. 10. 18 ; on periosteum, ii. 9. 

 II; on use of spleen, iii. 7. 15; on 

 duration of life in fat persons, ii. 5. 8 ; 

 on small appetite of dmnkards, iv. il. 

 9 ; on trachea, iii. 3. 6 ; on prepuce, ii. 

 13.4; on semen, iv. 10.33; on "saurae," 

 iv. 9. 16. 



Historia animalium, its title, ii. i. I; called 

 first treatise, iv. 5. 9 and 69 ; was illus- 

 trated, iv. 5. 34, iv. 9. 5. 



Holothuriae, iv. 5. 53 and 54. 



Homogeneous and Heterogeneous, distinc- 

 tion of, ii. I. 5, ii. 2. 3, ii. 9, 13 ; 

 mutual relations, ii. l. 9. 



Homer, respect for his authority, iii. 10. 10, 



Homology, of fins and limbs, iv. 13. 6 

 and 17 ; of limbs, iv. 12. 10. 



Hoofs, are integumental structures, ii 9. 12. 



Horns, are integumental structures, ii. 9. 

 12 ; not coexistent with tusks, iii. I. 3; 

 inversely related to teeth, iii. 2. 19; diff'er 

 in males and females, iii. I. 6; wanting 

 in polydactylous animals, iii. 2. 2 ; of 

 Indian ass, iii. 2. 10 ; of oryx, iii. 2. 12, 

 iii. I. I; of ruminants, iii. 2. 15; of 

 bull, iii. 2. 14; for defence or offence, iii. 

 I. I; sometimes an encumbrance, ii. 16. 

 4, iii. 2. 5 ; simulated in some animals, 

 iii. 2. I. 



Horse, duration of life, iv. 2. 17 ; mode of 

 fighting, iv. 10. 19 ; mammae of male, 

 iv. 10. ^o. 



