All terms in UBERON
| Label | Id | Description |
|---|---|---|
| obsolete deep blastomere | UBERON_2001473 | [Cells (completely cleaved), located underneath the superficial blastomeres and internal to the marginal blastomeres. Kimmel et al, 1995.] |
| sublingual dorsal and ventral separate | UBERON_2001474 | [Anatomical cluster consisting of the paired sublingual dorsal ossification and sublingual ventral ossification.] |
| mandibular lateral line neuromast | UBERON_2000125 | [Neuromast that is part of the mandibular lateral line. Kimmel et al, 1995. (Also see Anatomical Atlas entry for lateral line by T. Whitfield.)] |
| pectoral fin endoskeletal disc | UBERON_2001456 | [A plate-like chondrogenic condensation within the pectoral fin, which subdivides into individual radials by decomposition of extracellular matrix in the inter-radial mesenchyme (Grandel and Schulte-Merker, 1998).] |
| pectoral appendage cartilage tissue | UBERON_0007390 | [A cartilage tissue that is part of a pectoral appendage.] |
| antorbital | UBERON_2000127 | [Dermal bone positioned as the first bone of the infraorbital series. The antorbital articulates with the lacrimal or infraorbital 1 anteroventrally and the supraorbital posterodorsally. The antorbital is a paired bone.] |
| infraorbital series | UBERON_2001709 | [Anatomical cluster that is the series of dermal bones surrounding the orbit and associated with the infraorbital sensory canal.] |
| tegmentum | UBERON_0024151 | [The ventral topographic division of the midbrain; the dorsal topographic division is the tectum. Meckel (1817; see English translation, 1832, vol. 2, p. 467) apparently introduced the term and roughly its definition here for macrodissected adult humans, except he excluded the cerebral peduncle (Tarin, 1753), a white matter tract at the base of the midbrain, which is still common today but is included here. As defined here, tegmentum refers to the whole of the midbrain (Baer, 1837) excluding the tectum but including the pretectal region (Scalia, 1972); see Swanson (2000, pp. 522, 526). Usage of this term is very complex, inconsistent, and illogical; see for example Crosby et al. (1962, pp. 221, 260, 262), Carpenter (1976, p. 367 ff.).] |
| composite part spanning multiple base regional parts of brain | UBERON_0022776 | |
| UBERON_0025487 | UBERON_0025487 | |
| core of nucleus accumbens | UBERON_0012170 | |
| nucleus accumbens | UBERON_0001882 | [A region of the brain consisting of a collection of neurons located in the forebrain ventral to the caudate and putamen. (caudoputamen in rodent) and continuous with these structures. There is no distinct boundary between the nucleus accumbens and the caudate/putamen, but in rodents, it can be identified by its lack of traversing fiber bundles in comparison to the dorsal striatum. Its principle neuron is the medium spiny neuron. Together with the neostriatum (caudate nucleus and putamen), the nucleus accumbens forms the striatum.] |
| epitheliochorial placenta | UBERON_0036161 | [A placenta in which all three maternal layers are retained.] |
| endotheliochorial placenta | UBERON_0036162 | [A placenta in which the only maternal layer retained is the uterine endothelium.] |
| middle suprarenal artery | UBERON_0012173 | [The middle suprarenal arteries (middle capsular arteries; suprarenal arteries) are two small vessels which arise, one from either side of the abdominal aorta, opposite the superior mesenteric artery. They pass laterally and slightly upward, over the crura of the diaphragm, to the suprarenal glands, where they anastomose with suprarenal branches of the inferior phrenic and renal arteries. In the fetus these arteries are of large size.] |
| suprarenal artery | UBERON_0005624 | [Artery that supplies blood to the adrenal glands.] |
| hemochorial placenta | UBERON_0036163 | [A placenta in which no maternal layers are retained.] |
| obsolete geniculate nucleus | UBERON_0012174 | |
| ambient gyrus | UBERON_0036164 | [a rostral part of the parahippocampal gyrus.] |
| uncus of parahippocampal gyrus | UBERON_0034773 | [The anterior extremity of the Parahippocampal gyrus is recurved in the form of a hook, the uncus, which is separated from the apex of the temporal lobe by a slight fissure, the incisura temporalis. Although superficially continuous with the hippocampal gyrus, the uncus forms morphologically a part of the rhinencephalon. The term uncus was coined by Felix Vicq dbAzyr (1748b1794).] |