Want this question answered?
tuberculoma
Horizontal fissure of the right lung and Oblique fissure of right lung.
Yeah it has an oblique and horizontal fissure
The medial longitudinal fissure divides the brain into left and right hemispheres.
it separates the cerebrum into left and right hemispheres.
There is one major fissure that divides the cerebral hemispheres, called the longitudinal fissure. It separates the left and right hemispheres of the brain.
"Fissure" only determines what it will destroy when it resolves; this is why it is a non-targeting card. If "Scapegoat" were to be chained to "Fissure", then "Scapegoat" will resolve first, summoning the four 0/0 Sheep Tokens. "Fissure" will resolve next, and destroy the one with the lowest attack, almost definitely one of the tokens.
The most prominent division would be the "longitudinal fissure", which is that big line in the middle running anterior-posterior to the cerebral cortex. It was created before birth to give room to blood vessels to feed theWhen you dissect a brain you'll see those 2 sides connected by what looks like connective tissue, this tissue criss-crosses the nerves from back-to-front, meaning if you focus with your right eye, the message would be sent to the left back part of you brain. The second would be the the parieto-occipital sulcus, which really doesn't divide the brain but is constituted as a space in between, like a cave if you must. Another would be those to temporal lobes that pop out to the sides of the brain, looks like a helmet piece. Those are divided by the "lateral sulcus", your ears would be closest to it. The "transverse fissure" divides the cerebellum from the cerebrum. It runs all around the lower-back(inferior-posterior) part of the cerebrum. The pons look like balls, sits over the medulla oblongata which is the beginning of the brain stem(spinal cord). Gross fact: If you're a dude this might look familiar. -This is just the exterior stuff. Hope this helps
Postcentral gyrus, or the parietal lobe [Edit: The postcentral gyrus is posterior to the central sulcus, not anterior. The primary motor cortex is located directly anterior to the central sulcus.]
Arachnoid cysts can cause chronic remodeling and thinning of the adjacent skull. So--while I've personally never seen a case of skull fx directly overlying an arachnoid cyst (general diagnostic radiologist, 6 yrs in practice)--it certainly would seem that the involved portion of skull would be relatively more susceptible to fracture in the event of trauma.
The calcarine fissure is a complete sulcus at the caudal end of the medial surface of the brain. The visual cortex is found here at the back of the brain. The left side receives signals from the right eye and the right side receives signals form the left eye.
on the right