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Page "Ammonoidea" ¶ 4
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Ammonoid and .
( 1999 ) Evolution of Complexity in Paleozoic Ammonoid Sutures, Supplementary Material.
* Ammonoid. com

septa and have
The lungs of amphibians typically have a few narrow septa of soft tissue around the outer walls, increasing the respiratory surface area and giving the lung a honey-comb appearance.
The septa commonly have a small opening in the center, which functions as a cytoplasmic connection between adjacent cells, also sometimes allowing cell-to-cell movement of nuclei within a hypha.
Some fungi have aseptate hyphae, meaning their hyphae are not partitioned by septa.
The simplest browns are filamentous — that is, their cells are elongate and have septa cutting across their width.
The oomycetes rarely have septa ( see hypha ), and if they do, they are scarce, appearing at the bases of sporangia, and sometimes in older parts of the filaments.
# A Reaction to Eschatological Sensationalism-The millennial fervor of premillennialists as the year AD 500 was nearing caused them to have overly jovial celebrations ( some septa -/ sextamillennial interpreters calculated Jesus ’ s birth to have happened 5, 500 years after creation ).
Male bighorn sheep have large horn cores, enlarged cornual and frontal sinuses and internal bony septa.
They have nectaries at the septa of the ovaries.
Between the two layers of cells is a liquid-filled interior space, which, except for the immediate zones of contact with the central and dorsal sides, is pervaded by a star-shaped fiber syncytium: a fibrous network that consists essentially of a single cell but contains numerous nuclei that, while separated by internal crosswalls ( septa ), do not have true cell membranes between them.
They are often used in air-free techniques to take solvents after thet have been purified in stills, or from containers sealed with septa, to prevent gas entering the solution.
image: Illustration Ledum palustre0. jpg | Ledum capsules have septicidal dehiscence ; the fruit splits through the septa between the carpels
Within the compound ovary, the carpels may have distinct locules divided by walls called septa.

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The pleura and interlobular septa are thick in types 1 and 3.
The pleura is extremely thin in type 2 and septa are absent.
The lungs in amphibians are primitive compared to those of amniotes, possessing few internal septa and large alveoli and consequently having a comparatively slow diffusion rate for oxygen entering the blood.
If nectaries are present, they are in the septa of the ovaries rather than at the base of the tepals or stamens.
The lungs of lungfish are similar to those of amphibians, with few, if any, internal septa.
The cell walls of the ascomycetes almost always contain chitin and β-glucans, and divisions within the hyphae, called " septa ", are the internal boundaries of individual cells ( or compartments ).
In most fungi, hyphae are divided into cells by internal cross-walls called " septa " ( singular septum ).
Most of the capsaicin in a pungent ( hot ) pepper is concentrated in blisters on the epidermis of the interior ribs ( septa ) that divide the chambers of the fruit to which the seeds are attached.
A study on capsaicin production in fruits of C. chinense showed that capsaicinoids are produced only in the epidermal cells of the interlocular septa of pungent fruits, that blister formation only occurs as a result of capsaicinoid accumulation, and that pungency and blister formation are controlled by a single locus, Pun1, for which there exist at least two recessive alleles that result in non-pungency of C. chinense fruits.
For E. vogeli, its hydatid cysts are large and are actually polycystic since the germinal membrane of the hydatid cyst actually proliferates both inward, to create septa that divide the hydatid into sections, and outward, to create new cysts.
camera ) that are divided by thin walls called septa ( sing.
The divisions are defined by septa, each of which is pierced in the middle by a duct, the siphuncle.
These septa (" walls ") are firmly attached both to the plantar aponeurosis above and the sole's skin below.
Zygomycete hyphae may be coenocytic, forming septa only where gametes are formed or to wall off dead hyphae.
Histological septa are seen throughout most tissues of the body, particularly where they are needed to stiffen soft cellular tissue, and they also provide planes of ingress for small blood vessels.
Because the dense collagen fibres of a septum usually extend out into the softer adjacent tissues, microscopic fibrous septa are less clearly defined than the macroscopic types of septa listed above.

septa and from
A thin living tube called a siphuncle passed through the septa, extending from the ammonite's body into the empty shell chambers.
The fruit naturally splits opens ( dehisces ) to release the seeds by splitting along the septa from top to bottom or by means of two apical pores, depending on the varietal cultivar.
It also arises from the intermuscular septa of the arm, but more extensively from the medial than the lateral ; it is separated from the lateral below by the brachioradialis and extensor carpi radialis longus muscles.
It arises from the lateral epicondyle of the humerus, by the common extensor tendon ; from the radial collateral ligament of the elbow-joint ; from a strong aponeurosis which covers its surface ; and from the intermuscular septa between it and the adjacent muscles.
It arises from the head and upper two-thirds of the lateral surface of the body of the fibula, from the deep surface of the fascia, and from the intermuscular septa between it and the muscles on the front and back of the leg ; occasionally also by a few fibers from the lateral condyle of the tibia.
It arises from the common Extensor tendon by a thin tendinous slip, from the intermuscular septa between it and the adjacent muscles.
The interior of the cup contains radially aligned plates, or septa, projecting upwards from the base.
* Thick Trabecular: Corals with septa built from thick structures, resembling little beams, called trabecules.
* Minitrabecular: Corals with septa built from thin trabecules.
* Fascilcular or non-trabecular: Corals with septa not built from trabecules, but from columns composed of bunches of aragonite fibres.

septa and them
It can occur in any fatty tissue ( cutaneous or visceral ) and is often diagnosed on the basis of a deep skin biopsy, and can be further classified by histological characteristics based on the location of the inflammatory cells ( within fatty lobules or in the septa which separate them ) and on the presence or absence of vasculitis.

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