Lexicographical Neighbors of Neuromasts
Literary usage of Neuromasts
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Proceedings of the Iowa Academy of Science by Iowa Academy of Science (1907)
"The buccalis branch supplies the infra-orbital neuromasts at the end of the snout.
The supra-orbital division of the main trunk of the dorsal VII divides ..."
2. The Proceedings of the Iowa Academy of Science by Iowa Academy of Science (1907)
"The buccalis branch supplies the infra-orbital neuromasts at the end of the snout.
The supra-orbital division of the main trunk of the dorsal VII divides ..."
3. The American Naturalist by American Society of Naturalists, Essex Institute (1903)
"In 1870 Schulze discovered that the neuromasts, whether enclosed within canals
or exposed upon the surface, are characterized by the presence of specific ..."
4. The Nervous System of Vertebrates by John Black Johnston (1906)
"Since the taste organs are stimulated by chemical changes they do not need the
long sense hairs which adapt the neuromasts to stimulation by vibrations in ..."
5. The Journal of Anatomy and Physiology by Anatomical Society of Great Britain and Ireland (1885)
"Both neuromasts are in fact supplied by a branch of the same nerve, the ramus
oticus, which extends outwards towards these sensory structures through a ..."
6. The Journal of Comparative Neurology by Denison University (1903)
"(2) Neuromasts. This system of sense organs includes the lateral canal organs,
pit organs, ampullae and all other specialized organs associated with the ..."
7. A Text-book of Zoology by Thomas Jeffery Parker, William Aitcheson Haswell (1921)
"Integumentary sense-organs (neuromasts, p. 105) are highly developed in the
Elasmobranchs. They are supplied, as already mentioned, by branches of the ..."