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Debra nothing could be further from the trust. i can't even read sam or fish's back and forth it's so boring.
Please don't tar me with that brush. Just count my posts against those of Fisherman's, in terms of number as well as length. I'm practically minimalist by comparison.
Wouldn´t the uterus have expanded a whole deal at the stage of a six-or seven month pregnancy, though?
Hi Fisherman,
After approximately the 14-16th week of pregnancy the uterus is beyond the pelvis and the upper abdominal organs are pushed towards the chest. As a rule of thumb the top of the uterus is generally number of weeks in cm above the symphysis pubis of the pelvis (bottom at the front) at the latter stage of pregnancy
.
After approximately the 14-16th week of pregnancy the uterus is beyond the pelvis and the upper abdominal organs are pushed towards the chest. As a rule of thumb the top of the uterus is generally number of weeks in cm above the symphysis pubis of the pelvis (bottom at the front) at the latter stage of pregnancy
.
It is not "just a complete guess" - I have thought about this, and see nothing wrong in it. I'm not saying it's right, but it's not ridiculous either.
We have to account for Hebbert's choice of the description "long slips" somehow.
I don´t think anybody has proposed that it is ridiculous, Gareth. What has been said is that it is a complete guess, and that is correct.
You refute this by saying that we must account for Hebberts choice of the description "long slips" - but we must also account for his other wording about large, irregular flaps! And looking at the suggestions made about the shape of the flaps by Debra, Jerry and me, I´d say that it covers both wordings as well as one can hope for: wider at the top and then narrower as they involve the genital area, long, large and irregular slips. There also seems to be an acceptance that at least the lower part of the abdominal cavity, from the umbilicus down, may have been opened up almost totally by the removal of two such flaps.
It is not "just a complete guess" - I have thought about this, and see nothing wrong in it. I'm not saying it's right, but it's not ridiculous either.
We have to account for Hebbert's choice of the description "long slips" somehow.
We have to account for Hebbert's 'long irregular slips' but also his opening summary of body parts found including the description 'two large flaps'. Would he describe the size you suggest that way?
We have to account for Hebbert's 'long irregular slips' but also his opening summary of body parts found including the description 'two large flaps'. Would he describe the size you suggest that way?
Edit: As Fisherman has also mentioned.
As I've already suggested, strips of flesh two or three inches wide, starting above the navel and extending below the genitalia would be "large" by any standards. After all, Hebbert described them as slips, not panels.
As I've already suggested, strips of flesh two or three inches wide, starting above the navel and extending below the genitalia would be "large" by any standards. After all, Hebbert described them as slips, not panels.
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