NOTES. 385 
50 Chyle is opaque in carnivores; more or less transparent in all other Ver¬ 
tebrates, as in Birds, since the food does not contain fatty matter. 
51 In Fishes, the villi are few or wanting. In Man, they number about 
10,000 to the square inch. 
32 Except, perhaps, the tendons, ligaments, epidermis, etc. 
53 The phenomenon produced by these properties conjointly, capillary at¬ 
traction and diffusion, is called endosmosis. 
54 The blood is colorless also in the muscular part of Fishes. That of 
Birds is of the deepest red. The coloring matter of the red blood in worms 
is not in the corpuscles, but in the plasma. 
55 Coagulation may be artificially arrested by common salt. Arterial blood 
coagulates more rapidly than venous. The disposition of the red corpuscles 
in chains, or rouleaux , does not occur within the blood-vessels. The cause 
has not been discovered. 
36 The corpuscles of Invertebrates are usually colorless, even when the 
blood is tinged. 
57 Except during the foetal life. The corpuscles of the Camel are non- 
nncleated, as in other Mammals. If the transparent fluid from a boil be 
examined with a microscope, it will be seen to be almost composed of col¬ 
orless corpuscles, showing their use in repairing injuries. 
38 There are no valves in the veins of Fishes, Reptiles, and Whales, and 
few in Birds. 
59 Capillaries are wanting in the epidermis, nails, hair, teeth, and cartilages. 
Hence, the epidermis, for example, when worn out by use, is not removed by 
the blood, like other tissues, but is shed. 
60 A part of the blood, however, in going from the capillaries to the heart, 
is turned aside and made to pass through the liver and kidneys for purifica¬ 
tion. This is called the portal circulation, and exists in all Vertebrates, ex¬ 
cept that in Birds and Mammals it is confined to the liver. 
61 Two in the higher Mammals, three in the lower Mammals, Birds,.and. 
Reptiles. They are called venae, cavce. 
62 Tricuspid in Mammals, triangular in Birds. 
63 The pulse of a Hen is 140; of a Cat, 110 to 120; of a Dog, 90 to 100; 
and of an Ox, 25 to 42. 
64 The bivalve Brachiopods breathe by delicate arms about the mouth, and 
bv the “ mantle.” 
65 The air-bladder, found in most Fishes, is another rudiment of a lung, 
although it is used, not for respiration, but for altering the specific gravity 
of the Fish. In the Gar-pike of our Northern lakes, it very closely resem¬ 
bles a lung, having a cellular structure, a tracheal tube, and a glottis. It is 
here functional. The gills represent lungs only in function; they are totally 
distinct parts of the organism. 
i ee In the human lungs they number 600,000,000, each about of an 
inch in diameter, with an aggregate area of 132 square feet. Ihe thickness 
of the membrane between the blood and the air is 2 ^ 5 ^ of an inch. The 
lungs of Carnivores are more highly developed than those of Herbivores. In 
the Manatee, they are not confined to the thorax, but extend down nearly to 
the tail. 
25 
