LATERAL VEXTRI' 



481 



surface rests on the velum interpositum. The anterior pillars 

 descend in front of the anterior commissure of the brain, and. 

 becoming inflected downwards and backwards by the sides of the 

 third ventricle, pass to the corpus albicans, of which they form 

 the external fibres. 



Behind the anterior pillars of the fornix on each side, small 

 openings pass downwards and backwards, and, uniting in the 

 middle line, lead into the third ventricle. This is the 

 common ojj>enin<i or foramen of Mon/'o, which forms a communi- 

 cation between the two lateral and the third ventricles. 



The posterior pillars of the 

 fornix pass downwards and out- 

 wards to the descending cornua 

 of the lateral ventricles, and 

 then become continuous with the 

 hippocampi. The thin pro- 

 longation behind the choroid 

 plexus is the carpus Ji'n 

 turn {t-j. ,->. '.-j. hippocampi), and 

 the transverse white fibres which 

 !ike the strings of a harp, 

 between the pillars, form the 

 lyra. 



The / _/))/.> (comu 



Ammonis) is the large eminence, 

 constructed of white matter exter- Flc - 179 - 



.. , . ,. 1-1 Lateral ventricles opened from above. 1, 



nally and grey internally, which Grey matter; 2, White matter; a, Septum 



occupies the posterior part of 1 " cidnm ; 6 - Pa f ' corpn3 caU<X5tun : c c - 



Hippocampus; d, Tfenia semicm:ularu ; e, 



Choroid pleius; //, Corpus striatnm ; g, An- 

 terior cofnn of the ventricle ; h, Furrow lead- 

 ing backwards to descending cornu. 



the floor of the lateral ventricle. 

 The hippocampi are continuous 

 with the posterior pillars of the 

 fornix, and are separated from the optic thalami by the choroid 

 plexuses. Posteriorly they diverge and enter the descending 

 cornua of the ventricles, occupying the cul-de-s- Towards 



their terminations they become enlarged, and each presents a 

 number of rounded elevations, with indented edges somewhat 

 resembling the foot of an animal, and called the pes hip^oc'.impi. 

 The external white matter of the hippocampi is continuous, 

 through the corpora fimbriata, with the fornix and corpus 

 callosum. 



The coi*pus striatum is the pear-shaped prominence which 



'2 i 



