150 ProfeJJbr camper on the Organs of 
vember laft, I found both the ventricles united fo as to 
form but one. 
The 6th figure gives a fketch of it ; a, c, d, e, f g, h, 
b , is the ventricle, having, neverthelels, the two ?neatus's 
a and b, and fhewing evidently a kind of divifion in /; 
g, h., making a fmaller bag. 
This bag defcended downwards to the middle of the 
bread: bone, and fpread itfelf fidewards over the Jlerno- 
majloideus , with appendices underneath the cucullares. 
The latiffimi colli adhered very much to the fore-part, 
but fidewards ; and under, from the mufcles of the neck, 
they were eafily feparated by tearing gently, either with 
the top of the finger, or with the flat part of the han- 
dle of a diflecfling knife. 
As this Orang was much larger than the former ones, 
and confequently older, I dare not venture to determine, 
whether thefe ventricles or bags, which touch each other 
in the middle, grow together, fo as to make but one 
bladder; or whether this may be a variety: becaufe in 
the Orang which was alive at the Hague, and the hif- 
tory of which I (hall give by and by, there was likewife 
but one bag ftill larger than thefe, and proceeding far 
over the clavicles , backwards under the cucullares , and 
before down two-thirds of the breaft bone. 
6 
This 
