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Physiology and Hygiene for Secondary Schools by Francis M. Walters;A.M.
page 31 of 527 (05%)
These properties are all accounted for through the different materials
that enter into the formation of the blood.

[Fig. 8]


Fig. 8—Blood corpuscles, highly magnified. _A._ Red corpuscles as they
appear in diluted blood. _B._ Arrangement of red corpuscles in rows
between which are white corpuscles, as may be seen in undiluted blood.
_C._ Red corpuscles much enlarged to show the form.


*Composition of the Blood.*—To the naked eye the blood appears as a thick
but simple liquid; but when examined with a compound microscope, it is
seen to be complex in nature, consisting of at least two distinct
portions. One of these is a clear, transparent liquid; while the other is
made up of many small, round bodies that float in the liquid. The liquid
portion of the blood is called the _plasma_; the small bodies are known as
_corpuscles_. Two varieties of corpuscles are described—the _red_
corpuscles and the _white_ corpuscles (Fig. 8). Other round particles,
smaller than the corpuscles, may also be seen under favorable conditions.
These latter are known as _blood platelets_.

*Red Corpuscles.*—The red corpuscles are classed as cells, although, as
found in the blood of man and the other mammals (Fig. 9), they have no
nuclei.(6) Each one consists of a little mass of protoplasm, called the
_stroma_, which contains a substance having a red color, known as
_hemoglobin_. The shape of the red corpuscle is that of a circular disk
with concave sides. It has a width of about 1/3200 of an inch (7.9
microns(7)) and a thickness of about 1/13000 of an inch (1.9 microns). The
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