1934
DOI: 10.5962/bhl.title.6531
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The anatomy of the salamander, by Eric T. B. Francis, with an historical introduction by Professor F. J. Cole.

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Cited by 41 publications
(121 citation statements)
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“…Triturus Rafinesque;De Beer, 1937) to well after metamorphosis (e.g. Salamandra Laurenti; Francis, 1934). Carroll & Currie (1975) questioned the homology of the mentomeckelian in anurans and caudates based on functional differences, but because the element has the same ontogenetic origin in both groups I concur with Bolt (1991) that it is homologous.…”
supporting
confidence: 68%
“…Triturus Rafinesque;De Beer, 1937) to well after metamorphosis (e.g. Salamandra Laurenti; Francis, 1934). Carroll & Currie (1975) questioned the homology of the mentomeckelian in anurans and caudates based on functional differences, but because the element has the same ontogenetic origin in both groups I concur with Bolt (1991) that it is homologous.…”
supporting
confidence: 68%
“…This groove would have housed the palatal branch of the internal carotid artery. In contrast to the condition seen in temnospondyls [73] and lissamphibians [74] where the internal carotid divides into cerebral and palatal branches either within the parasphenoid itself or within the hypophyseal fossa, the internal carotid artery of Brachydectes appears to have been divided into cerebral and palatal branches prior to entering the braincase, consistent with the morphology seen in some stem and crown amniotes [75]. …”
Section: Descriptionmentioning
confidence: 60%
“…A certain number of animals so infected recover after a definite febrile course. Francis and Terrell (4) have demonstrated that in monkeys of the Macacus cynomolgos species it is possible to produce experimental pneumonia by intratracheal or intrabronchial inoculation of Type III Pneumococcus. The clinical aspects of experimentally induced infection in monkeys closely resemble those of spontaneous disease in man.…”
Section: Somatic C Polysaccharide O1 ¢ Pnei~ococclys Iimentioning
confidence: 99%