Most human beings are born with 1 pair of lungs, a left lung and a right lung. The left lung holds both the cranial and caudal lobes . The right lungs holds the middle, cranial and caudal lobes.
The right lung of a fetal pig consists of the cranial, middle, and caudal lobes. The cranial lobe is the largest lobe and is further divided into cranial and caudal parts.
A dog has six lung lobes. The right lung has cranial, middle, caudal and accessory lobes, and the left lung has a cranial and caudal lobe. Note. The cranial portion of the left lobe also has a cranial and caudal part, so it looks like the left side has three lobes.
Lungs..
The left lung of a fetal pig has two lobes: the cranial lobe and the caudal lobe.
Most sheep lungs have four lobes - the left cranial, left caudal, right cranial, and right caudal lobes. Some sheep may have an accessory lobe known as the intermediate lobe, making a total of five lobes.
There are four lobes that are present in the lungs of a pig. The larger, right lung is divided into four lobes; the apical, cardiac, diaphragmatic, and the fourth samller lobe below the apex of the heart, the intermediate.
Pigs have 4 lobes in their right lung and 3 lobes in their left lung. The 3 lobes of the left lung are apical, cardiac, and diaphragmatic lobes.
Anterior cranial fossa which accommodates the anterior lobe of brain.Middle cranial fossa, much wider than the anterior cranial fossa contain the 2 temporal lobes of brain.Posterior cranial fossa is much shallower and wider than the middle cranial fossa and it accommodates the occipital lobes of the brain.
impulses travel down cranial nerve 2 to what lobe
The left cranial lobe is located in the brain, specifically on the left side of the cerebral cortex. It is responsible for functions such as language processing, analytical thinking, and speech production.
in the posterior cranial fossa (below the occipital lobe of cerebrum)
The frontal lobe of the brain rests in the anterior cranial fossa. It plays a key role in functions such as reasoning, planning, movement, emotions, and problem-solving.