Lexicographical Neighbors of Mesogloea
Literary usage of Mesogloea
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. An Introduction to the Study of the Comparative Anatomy of Animals by Gilbert Charles Bourne (1900)
"... its interstitial cells, and then all three layers, ectoderm, mesogloea, and
endoderm, are bulged outwards to form a hollow projection from the surface. ..."
2. Proceedings of the Cambridge Philosophical Society by Cambridge Philosophical Society (1902)
"Below the nucleated layer of the ectoderm there is a zone of granular material
which is closely applied •to the mesogloea and which remains colourless in ..."
3. Journal of Morphology by Wistar Institute of Anatomy and Biology (1891)
"The mesogloea is fairly well developed in the younger specimens, and contains a
number of the canals as well as a few elongated, fibril-like cells. ..."
4. The Cambridge Natural History by Arthur Everett Shipley, Sidney Frederic Harmer (1906)
"The mesogloea may be very thin and inconspicuous, as it is in Hi/dm and many ...
The growth of the mesogloea in many Coelenterata leads to modifications of ..."
5. Contributions from the Bermuda Biological Station for Research by Bermuda Biological Station for Research (1916)
"The bases of the ectoderm cells seem active in the formation of mesogloea in all
parts of the colony and there is evidence of the secretion of the same ..."
6. A Treatise on Zoology by Edwin Ray Lankester (1900)
"iM, endoderm ; mg, mesogloea ; msc, muscle banner with supporting plications of
... their middle layer is called the mesogloea, whether it be structureless ..."