NOTES 



229 



called ductus Rivini. Rivinus described 

 them in a corollary to his Disputatio 

 de dyspepsia. Lipsiae 1678. (Haller, 

 Bibliotheca Anatomica I p. 649), re* 

 printed in Augusti Quirini Rivini . . . 

 Dissertationes Medics Diversis Tempo* 

 ribus Habitae . . . Lipsiae 1710, p. 425. 

 — The last discovered of the greater 

 ducts of the salivary glands, has first been 

 described by Caspar Bartholin, Thomas 

 filius, in De Ductu Salivali Hactenus non 

 descripto Observatio Anatomica. Hafhiae 

 1684. 



P. 27. 1. 1 from bottom. 



Adenogr. c. 22.] Cap. XXII pp. 142 

 —143. P. 143: Concludo igitur, falivam 

 proprie Jignificare debere, liquorem per 

 ductus falivales effufum; fputum tufsi 

 rejectum, excrementum pulmonum; hu= 

 morem e naribus &■ fupra palatum, pi= 

 tuitam cerebri; verum muccum tonfilla= 

 rum, materiam Mam, quae per tonfillas, 

 de quibus nunc agimus, excernitur. 



P. 28. 1. 4 from top. 



Schneideri De Catarrhis] Con= 

 radi Victoris Schneideri . . . Liber De 

 Catarrhis Tertius . . . Wirtebergae 1661. 

 sect. II. c. III. p. 501. P. 503: Ilia 

 membrana, que additamentum offis Oc« 

 cipitis in ultimo palato involvit, ilia, m= 

 quam, pituitam condit, continet &■ emit- 

 tit. — Schneider was the first who spoke 

 against the then generally adopted the* 

 ory that the mucus of the nose, the 

 mouth and the throat had its origin 

 from the brain, from where it passed 

 down through the minute holes in the 

 bones of the skull. Schneider maintained 

 that the mucus originated from the mem= 

 brana pituitaria anterior and posterior 

 (the mucuous membrane of the nose and 

 the upper part of the throat) and was 



formed by a sort of exudation from the 

 arteries of the mucuous membranes. 



P. 28. 1. 7 from top. 



foraminulis] Ed. Lugd. Batav. 1680 

 has foraminibus. 



P. 31. 1. 8 from top. 



raram . . . hiftoriam refert] Tho= 

 mae Bartholini Historiarum Anatomica? 

 rum Rariorum Centuria HI. &■ IV. Haf* 

 niae 1657. Cent. Ill hist. LXXVII p. 152: 

 Ptyalismus Jingularis. 



P. 31. 1. 16 from top. 



non poterunt non] The latter non 

 is not found in Edd. Lugd. Batav. 1662 

 and 1680. 



P. 31. 1. 10 from bottom. 



De Morbis a Serof. Coll.] Selec= 

 tiorvm Observationvm Et Consiliorvm 

 De Praztervisis Hactenvs Morbis Ajfec= 

 tibvsqve Praeter naturam ab aqua, feu 

 ferosa colluuie &■ diluuie ortis Liber 

 Singvlaris. Avthore Carolo Pisone. Ponte 

 Ad Monticvlvm 1618. sect. I theor. 4. 

 pp. 34—35. — P. 35: Quasfi verafunt, vt 

 funt verijjima, certe concludere ejl caput 

 ejfe veluti labrum feu cajlellum natum 

 dijhibutioni aquae in varia membra eius 

 vfus indiga. 



P. 31. 1. 8 from bottom. 



feet. 2. part. 1. c. 2.] ibid. pp. 39-41. 



P. 32. 1. 7 from top. 



A cerefero alii] As to the theories 

 most current at the time of Steno con* 

 cerning the genesis of the saliva and other 

 secretions, the reader is referred, in ad« 

 dition to the notes to vol. I p. 28. 1. 4 

 from top, to Wharton's Adenogr aphia, 

 partly to the introduction, partly to 



