A morphological and connectional analysis was performed on the dorsal thalamus of the alpine newt, Triturus alpestris. We have used a graphic reconstruction technique for the evaluation of the connectional (HRP) data. On the basis of these reconstructions, we propose a subdivision of the salamandrid dorsal thalamus into subhabenular, anteroventral, and posterodorsal zones. Each of these zones is defined by its telencephalic projections ("ascending thalamofugal systems"). The posterodorsal zone projects to the striatum, the anteroventral zone to the pallium. The subhabenular zone projects to the subpallial telencephalon and to the tegmentum. This zonal subdivision allows a more detailed comparison of the salamandrid dorsal thalamic features with ranid dorsal thalamic structures. We compare our dorsal thalamic zones to the ones proposed by Herrick (J. Comp. Neurol. 62:239-261, '35, The Brain of the Tiger Salamander. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, '48). Furthermore, using the same reconstructive technique, we undertook an analysis of the spatial relations of various inputs to the salamandrid dorsal thalamus ("thalamopetal systems"). Besides the well-known retinal inputs, we identified the tectum and the tegmentum as sources of inputs to the thalamus. We provide evidence that there is no extensive multi- or unimodal overlap of these thalamopetal systems.