“…Most gastric ulcers occur at the junction of antral and fundic mucosa (Oi et al , 1959; Marks and Shay, 1959; Shrager et al , 1967), the level of which varies in different individuals (Dean and Mason, 1964; Capper et al , 1966). The coexistence of high gastric ulcers with a high antro‐fundic junction is supported by evidence that these ulcers are associated with a small parietal cell mass (Baron, 1963) and a large area of atrophic antral mucosa (Du Plessis, 1965; Capper et al , 1966). Thus a high ulcer is often accompanied by achlorhydria (Johnson, 1965; Vesely et al , 1968), while low gastric and duodenal ulcers commonly occur in patients with high gastric acid levels.…”