A 
                          fixed brain is embedded in celloidin and hundreds of 
                          thin sections (25-40 microns thick) are sectioned sequentially 
                          from the block like one would in slicing a sausage. 
                          The brain specimens from which we have prepared serial 
                          sections are arranged from front to back (rostral - 
                          caudal) and are listed below. View the Atlas sections 
                          from the specimen of your choice by clicking on the 
                          section image next to each animal's name. 
                        DIDELPHIMORPHIA 
                         
                        
                        
                         
                         
                        DIPROTODONTIA  
                        
                        
                        
                        
                        AFROSORICIDA
                        
                         
                         
                        MACROSCELIDEA 
                        
                        
                        
                        
                         
                        HYRACOIDEA 
                        
                        
                         
                         
                        SIRENIA 
                        
                        
                        CINGULATA 
                         
                        
                         
                         
                        PILOSA
                        
                        
                        SCANDENTIA
                        
                        
                        
                        DERMOPTERA 
                        
                         
                         
                        PRIMATES 
                        
                         
                         
                        LAGOMORPHA
                        
                        
                        
                        ERINACEOMORPHA                        
                        
                        
                        
                          SORICOMORPHA
                        
                        
                         
                         
                        CHIROPTERA
                        
                         
                         
                        CARNIVORA 
                        
                        
                        
                        
                        PERISSODACTYLA
                        
                        
                        
                        ARTIODACTYLA 
                        
                        
                         
                        
                         
                        CETACEA 
                        
                        
                         
                         
                        RODENTIA 
                          
                        
                        
                         A 
                          major aim of our Web Site is to allow anyone to find 
                          out how the brains of mammals are constructed; what 
                          the internal architecture of brains look like, and which 
                          are the different groups of neurons that are responsible 
                          for different functions such as behavioral, mental and 
                          emotional capabilities.  
                       
                      The 
                        chimpanzee brain shown in the title above is pulled apart 
                        at three different planes of section and the parts pulled 
                        apart to reveal the stained sections at their interfaces. 
                      The 
                        collections of brain sections displayed for different 
                        animals on this page are taken from different planes of 
                        coronal section from the front to the back of each brain. 
                        These sections are arranged as sets of images that have 
                        been stained to reveal the internal arrangement of either 
                        nerve cells or fiber tracts. These collections of brain 
                        section pictures constitute what are called ATLASES. 
                      Brain 
                        Atlases are thus maps that reveal how their cell groups 
                        and fiber tracts are arranged. An atlas of the chimpanzee 
                        brain is like a guide book that shows how the chimp brain 
                        is constructed. The pages of a brain atlas of a particular 
                        animal represent the sections from the front to the back 
                        of the brain of that animal. The text in a brain atlas 
                        tells how the brain is constructed, what its different 
                        parts are, and what the parts are called or named. Thus, 
                        a brain atlas is a directory of the circuits of the brain. 
                        It can be used by anyone who wishes to understand how 
                        the brain is put together, and it helps us in understanding 
                        where different brain functions are localized and distributed. 
                      It 
                        is important to note that the brains of all mammals have 
                        the same basic brain parts, cell groups, fiber tracts, 
                        and neural circuits. The same brain nuclei that can be 
                        identified in rats and mice can also be found in the brains 
                        of humans, horses and whales. Human brain atlases reveal 
                        additional nuclei not found in other animals. Every animal 
                        has brain nuclei that are differentially enlarged or diminished 
                        from similar nuclei found in other animals. 
                      Study 
                        of the brain atlases of different mammals can reveal features 
                        that are unique or special to the different mammals, and 
                        thus can help us understand how differences in neuroanatomical 
                        construction of each mammal relate to functional expressions 
                        that are also unique or specialized in that mammal. 
                      Brain 
                        atlases have been prepared for a variety of animals. Information 
                        about these various brain atlases can be found at the 
                        following Web sites:  
                      http://faculty.washington.edu/chudler/ehceduc.html 
                        http://cajal.ucsd.edu/Pages/atlases.html 
                         
                         
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