Publisher's Synopsis
Excerpt from Manual of General, Descriptive, and Pathological Anatomy, Vol. 2 of 3
The fibres are thicker on the vertebra than in any other part; they grow thinner and shorter as they approach the upper and lower faces of the bone. Hence the anterior surface of the vertebral column is more uniformly convex than it would be without this arrangement, since the bodies of the vertebrae are concave from above downward.
Besides the straight fibres, we also find many which are oblique; these cross the former at a very acute angle.
This ligament is thicker, and its fibres are much closer in its centre than on the sides: The fibres separate very much from each other on the two sides of the median line, while on the contrary they unite backward so that they form three bands, the central of which is the strongest while the two lateral bands are weaker.
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