NERVOUS SYSTEM.
I. The Spinal Cord ([p. 335]).
Use the specimen on which the muscles were dissected. (Or if the peripheral nerves are not to be dissected on the specimen used for the blood-vessels, that may be employed.)
Make a longitudinal dorsal median incision of the skin, between the back of the head and root of the tail. Reflect the skin for one or two inches on each side of the incision and cut away the muscles covering the neural arches of the vertebræ from the third cervical to the seventh or eighth thoracic inclusive.
Remove with bone-forceps the neural arch of one of the last cervical vertebræ and find the spinal nerve emerging from the intervertebral foramen. Isolate the nerve for a short distance, then proceed craniad, removing the neural arches on one side and isolating the nerves until the third has been uncovered. The ganglion of the second nerve should be sought among the muscles on the dorsal surface between the atlas and axis, and after it has been isolated the arch of the axis may be removed. (The nerve may be found beneath the clavotrapezius and traced to the ganglion.)
The ganglion of the second nerve should be isolated in or near the atlantal foramen, the muscles to which it passes turned aside, and the arch of the atlas removed. Having thus uncovered the first two or more spinal ganglia, proceed caudad, removing the vertebral arches, until the whole cord and its nerves are exposed. Then—
1. Study the cord, enlargements, filum terminale, etc. ([p. 334], and [Figs. 133] and [136]).
2. Slit open and reflect the dura mater ([p. 337]) for an inch or two.
3. Demonstrate the arachnoid by pulling it off with forceps.
4. Reflect the pia mater in the same way as the dura mater.