tentorium cerebelli separates your cerebellum from your cerebrum.
Tentorium cerebelli from an anatomical standpoint would separate the cerebrum from the cerebellum.
The cerebrum is separated from the cerebellum by a thin layer of tissue called the dura mater. The cerebellum connects to the rest of the brain using a structure called the pons.
The Vermis lies between the two hemispheres of the Cerebellum. The Transverse fissure separates the Cerebrum from the Cerebellum.
transverse fissure
tentorium cerebelli
Flax cerebri
Mid brain separates both parts .
Frontal Parietal Occipital Temporal Cerebellum
cerebrum and the cerebellum
The transverse fissure separates the cerebrum from the cerebellum.
The Equator (zero latitude) that separates the Northern and the Southern Hemispheres, and the Prime Meridian (zero longitude) that separates the Western and the Eastern Hemispheres.
The falx cerebelli invaginates into the cerebellar notch between the two cerebellar hemispheres. It doesn't actually separate the two hemispheres though. The falx cerebri separates the two cerebral hemispheres.
Nothing. It's connected by a few centimeters.
it separates the cerebrum into left and right hemispheres.
The cerebellum and cerebral hemispheres
Frontal Parietal Occipital Temporal Cerebellum
The equator separates the north and south hemispheres.
The equator is an imaginary line that separates the northern and southern hemispheres. It is located at 0 degrees latitude and circles the Earth halfway between the North Pole and the South Pole.
cerebrum and the cerebellum
No, the cerebellum is part of the brain.
Falx Cerebelli.
There is one line, the equator, that separates the northern from the southern hemisphere.
The Equator (zero latitude) that separates the Northern and the Southern Hemispheres, and the Prime Meridian (zero longitude) that separates the Western and the Eastern Hemispheres.
Tentorium cerbelli