The topographical anatomy of the head and neck of the horse / [O. Charnock Bradley].
- Orlando Charnock Bradley
- Date:
- 1923
Licence: In copyright
Credit: The topographical anatomy of the head and neck of the horse / [O. Charnock Bradley]. Source: Wellcome Collection.
32/248 page 16
![M. TRAPEZIUS (JERYICALIS.—The cervical part of the trapezius ^ muscle forms a thin, pale, triangular sheet with an origin from the ligamentum nuchm, extending from the third thoracic vertebra to the level of the epistropheus. Its insertion is partly to the spine of the N. auricularis magnus. Pig, 7.—Dissection outlie lateral aspect of the neck. Second stage. scapula and partly to the scapular fascia. To clean the surface of the trapezius is a tedious task because of the firm adhesion of the cervical fascia, the fibres of which run at right angles to the direction of the fibres of the muscle. The ventral border of the trapezius is adherent to and may slightly overlap the border of the brachio-cephalic muscle. ^ Trapezium [L.], from rpaire^Lov (trapezion) [Gr.], a small table; from the four-sided outline of the muscles of the two sides of the body taken together.](https://iiif.wellcomecollection.org/image/b29820066_0032.jp2/full/800%2C/0/default.jpg)


