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Sense-Organs susceptible to Pressure

Sense-Organs susceptible to Pressure.jpg Plan of the foetal circulationThumbnailsVertical section of the skull, showing the sinuses of the dura materPlan of the foetal circulationThumbnailsVertical section of the skull, showing the sinuses of the dura materPlan of the foetal circulationThumbnailsVertical section of the skull, showing the sinuses of the dura materPlan of the foetal circulationThumbnailsVertical section of the skull, showing the sinuses of the dura materPlan of the foetal circulationThumbnailsVertical section of the skull, showing the sinuses of the dura mater

All are formed on essentially the same plan; a fibrous capsule invests a group of epithelial cells amongst which a nerve ramifies. The simplest form is known as a Grandry’s corpuscle-a nerve ending in one or two plates between two or three epithelial cells. These organs are found in great numbers in the bills of aquatic birds. If a duck is watched whilst it is gobbling mud at the margin of a pond, it will be seen to have a remarkable capacity for discriminating between the shells of small snails, which it can crush, and stones, which it needs to drop from its bill. Its bill is also provided with small Pacinian corpuscles.