258 



NOTES 



falfae, funt & in fluvijs fontibusq; purse 

 &faporis expertes odorisq; , fplendidio= 

 res vitro, quibus Najades & Ephydvides, 

 Nymphae puriffimae praefidebant. Nolu= 

 mus has extra nos follicitare. Nymphas 

 corporibus nqftris claudimus, & Najades 

 invenis lymphaticis, fi fuperjiitiojis ejje 

 liceret, veneraremur. — As regards the 

 conglobate and conglomerate glands, 

 see note to vol. I p. 20. 1. 17—18 from 

 bottom. 



P. 183. 1. 7 from top. 



Wirtzungio debent conglomera* 

 tae] Wirsung was the first to find the 

 pancreatic duct in the human body 

 (1642), Maur. Hoffman having dis* 

 covered it the year before in a turkey. 

 Shortly after his discovery U^i'rsung was 

 killed by another physician. 



P. 183. 1. 9-10 from top. 



Whartoni. .. Deufingius] Whar- 

 ton published his discovery of the duct 

 of the submaxillary gland in his Ade= 

 nographia . . . Londini 1656. The editor 

 of the present Edition has not been able 

 to find anything about Deusing's rela* 

 tion to Wharton in those of Deusing's 

 writings, which he has seen. 



P. 183. 1. 11 from top. 



Blafius] Concerning Steno's dis« 

 covery of the parotid gland and Blaes' 

 attempt to appropriate the honour of 

 this discovery, see the Introduction and 

 the previous Treatises passim, especially 

 XIII. 



P. 183. 1. 14 from top. 



in Obfervationibus] Nicolai Ste- 

 nonis Observationes Anatomicae . . . 

 Lugd. Batav. 1662. It comprises II, IV, 

 V and VI in the present Edition. 



P. 183. 1. 14-15 from top. 



reliqva . . . exponam] Steno never 

 published any extensive work on the 

 glands; but he returned to these organs 

 in his descriptions of the dissections of 

 some rays and sharks. See the Treatises 

 XVI vol.1 p. 193, XXIII vol.11 p. 113 

 and XXIV vol. II p. 147. See, also, the 

 Appendix, vol. II p. 308. 



P. 183. 1. 19 from bottom. 



Salivare exterius] See especially 

 the Treatises I and II. 



P. 183. 1. 12 from bottom. 



Epicuri intermundia] Epicurus 

 maintained that there was an infinite 

 number of worlds, between which were 

 large and empty spaces, and that the 

 atoms, flying through these spaces, uni* 

 ted and thus made one world upon the 

 other. 



P. 183. 1. 10-11 from bottom. 



Apologise Prodromus] XIII vol. 

 I p. 143 in the present Edition. 



P. 183. 1. 8 from bottom. 



de teftimoniis ejus] See the intro* 

 duction to the notes to XIII, vol. I p. 

 252. 



P. 184. 1. 3-4 from top. 



Anagrammafticam Hobokianum] 

 See note to XIII vol. I p. 146. 1. 3-4 

 from top. 



P. 184. 1. 9 from top. 



non erubuit] Concerning Steno's 

 controversy with Deusing see especially 

 the Introduction and Treatise IV in the 

 present Edition. 



P. 184. 1. 14 from top. 



Buccarum vafcula] See II vol. I 

 p. 26. 



