Abstract
THE third of the four volumes which are to form a “Surgical Anatomy of the Horse” deals with the hind limb, and will doubtless fulfil the author's hope that it may be “at least as acceptable as the preceding volume both to students and practitioners in the study and practice of the important branch of veterinary work to which it relates.” The present volume has all the merits of its predecessors. Of its value as a means by which the practitioner may refresh his memory of the anatomy of the regions with which he is concerned surgically there Can be little question. In some places the anatomical descriptions are both long and detailed, and contain all the information which is in any way important. At the same time, the present part of the work is not without some of the defects exhibited in those sections of the work which have already been noticed in these columns.
The Surgical Anatomy of the Horse. Part iii.
By J. T. Share-Jones. Pp. x + 220. (London: Williams and Norgate, 1908.) Price 15s. net.
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The Surgical Anatomy of the Horse Part iii. Nature 79, 333–334 (1909). https://doi.org/10.1038/079333a0
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/079333a0