Quantum redactiones paginae "Calvaria" differant

Content deleted Content added
No edit summary
m ~ (10K)
Linea 1:
[[Fasciculus:Human skull side bones.svg|thumb|300 pxupright=1.2|Calvaria [[homo sapiens|hominis]] a latere depicta]]
[[Fasciculus:Tuatara skull side.PNG|thumb|[[Sphendon]]tis calvaria [[Os (anatomia ossis)|ossa]] sequentia ostendens:<br/>
I - [[praemaxilla]]m<br />
Linea 14:
XII - [[os quadratum]]]]
 
'''Calvaria''' (''-ae''), sive '''calva''' (vide etiam alia vocabula [[#De vocabulis|infra]]), est complexus [[os (anatomia ossis)|ossium]] [[caput|capitis]] omnium [[animal]]ium [[vertebrata|vertebratorum]] [[Craniatacraniata|craniatorum]] (sicut et [[homo sapiens|hominis]]), quae [[cerebrum]] et alia [[viscus|membra]] [[caput|capitis]] tuentur.
 
== De vocabulis ==
[[Vocabulum]] in [[antiquitas|antiquitate]] usitatum ad hanc structuram significandam erat '''calvaria''', e.g. apud [[Celsus|Celsum]]: "Tum interest venae pituitam mittant quae inter calvariam et cutem sunt, an quae inter membranam cerebri et calvariam".<ref>[http://penelope.uchicago.edu/Thayer/L/Roman/Texts/Celsus/7*.html Cels. 7.7.15].</ref> Deinde ''calvaria'' (''-orum'') aliquando invenitur. [[Livius]] '''calva''' eodem sensu utitur: "purgato inde capite, ut mos iis est, calvam auro caelavere, idque sacrum vas iis erat quo sollemnibus libarent poculumque idem sacerdotibus esset ac templi antistitibus".<ref>[http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/hopper/text?doc=Perseus%3Atext%3A1999.02.0204%3Abook%3D23%3Achapter%3D24 Liv. 23.24.12].</ref> ''Calva'' autem "caput [[calvitium|calvum]]" alibi significare videtur, etenim ambo vocabula ''calvaria'' et ''calva'' ex adiectivo ''calvus'' deducta sunt. Aliquando '''[[testa]]''' (ad litteras "fragmen [[lutum|luti]]") vel etiam '''[[caput]]''' adhibebantur. In [[mediaMedia Latinitas|mediaMedia Latinitate]] '''cranium''' ex Graeco "κρανίον" formatum est. In lingua medicinae[[medicina]]e hodiernahodiernae, '''cranium''' indicat summam omnium ossium capitis significat, '''calvaria''' sive '''neurocranium''' autem omnia ossa cerebrum circumdantia.<ref>''Duden -: Wörterbuch medizinischer Fachausdrücke.,'' 3ed. editio3a (1979). Manhemii, Vindobonae, Turici: Dudenverlag, 1979).</ref>
 
== Historia ==
Sunt qui magnitudinem calvariae humanae minoratam esse propter climata calidiora [[Holocaenum|Holocaeni]] creduntcredant. [[Selectio naturalis]] frigidis [[corpus]] magnum climatibus sumere solet. Post [[Aevum glaciale|Aetetatem Glacialem]] climata fuereerant calidiora. EximExinde cranium humanum termino [[Pleistocaenum|Pleistocaeni]] crescere desiit.<ref>Henneberg, Maciej (1988). "Decrease of human skull size in the Holocene". ''Human Biology''. '''60'''(3): 395–405. JSTOR 41464021. <nowiki>PMID 3134287</nowiki>.</ref> <ref>Chao Liu, Yuchun Tang, Haitao Ge, Fen Wang et aliaal. Increasing breadth of the frontal lobe but decreasing height of the human brain between two Chinese samples from a Neolithic site and from living humans. ''Am J Phys Anthropol'' 154:94–103, 2014.</ref> Deminutio cerebri ob calvariam minorem facta est.<ref>Christopher Stringer., Why Have Our Brains Started to Shrink? ''Scientific American. ''</ref>
 
== Aliae significationes ==
Linea 26:
 
== Notae ==
<div class="references-small"><references /></div>
 
==Bibliographia==
*Chao Liu, Yuchun Tang, Haitao Ge, Fen Wang, et alii. [[2014]]. Increasing breadth of the frontal lobe but decreasing height of the human brain between two Chinese samples from a Neolithic site and from living humans. ''American Journal of Physical Anthropology'' 154: 94–103.
*Henneberg, Maciej. [[1988]]. Decrease of human skull size in the Holocene. ''Human Biology'' 60(3): 395–405. JSTOR 41464021. PMID 3134287.
 
{{med-stipula}}