The parieto occipital fissure is only seen to a slight extent on the outer surface of the hemisphere; being situated for the most part on its mesial aspect. The portion on the outer surface is called the external parieto pecipital fissure, to distinguish it from the part continued on to the internal surface, which is termed the internal parieto occipital fissure. The external parieto occipital fissure commences about midway between the posterior extremity or occipital pole of the brain and the fissure of Rolando, and runs downward and outward for about an inch.
These three fissure divide the external surface of the hemisphere into four lobes; the frontal, the parietal, the occipital, and the temporal. To this must be added:
- the central lobe, or island of Reil, which is situated deeply in the Sylvian fissure
- the olfactory lobe, which is found at the base of the brain and was formerly described under the name of the oflactory nerve.
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