THE CORNEA

After the anterior portion has had everything removed from it there will be left nothing but the first coat or tunic of the eye—the anterior portion of the sclerotic and the cornea. The way the cornea seems to fit into the sclerotic is not quite as one is led to believe when told that it fits into the sclerotic much the same way in which a watch crystal fits into a watch.[3] Holding this part of the eye up to a strong light one will see that the sclerotic seems to overlap the cornea in the vertical axis.

By using the tweezers the cornea may be split. Nothing in the way of locating its layers can be recognized, however, unless a section is made for microscopic examination. The epithelial may be scraped off when the cornea is a trifle dry. This is the ocular epithelium reduced to a layer of flattened cells.