obsolete internal muscle [FBbt_00000484]

This term comes from Crossley’s classification of larval hypodermal muscles (Crossley, 1978, Ashburner, Wright, 1978-1980 b: 499–560). This partially classifies on the basis of whether a muscle is in a layer immediately below the epidermis (external) or under another layer of hypodermal muscle (internal). This system is now little used and was only every very partially implemented in this ontology. Mappings for specific internal and external muscle classes to the modern nomenclature (Bate, 1993, Bate, Martinez Arias, 1993: 1013–1090; Campos-Ortega and Hartenstein, 1997, The embryonic development of Drosophila melanogaster. 2nd ed.) can be found as synonyms for the relevant terms. Mappings for the general terms to the modern nomenclature are not possible as classification as internal vs external cuts across the modern classification. In such cases one must choose either a more specific term if appropriate, or a very general term for embryonic/larval hypodermal muscle. [obsolete internal muscle]

Open obsolete internal muscle in VFB

Term Information

  • ID: FBbt_00000484
  • Name: obsolete internal muscle
  • Definition:
  • Synonyms:
  • Type:
  • Comment: This term comes from Crossley’s classification of larval hypodermal muscles (Crossley, 1978, Ashburner, Wright, 1978-1980 b: 499–560). This partially classifies on the basis of whether a muscle is in a layer immediately below the epidermis (external) or under another layer of hypodermal muscle (internal). This system is now little used and was only every very partially implemented in this ontology. Mappings for specific internal and external muscle classes to the modern nomenclature (Bate, 1993, Bate, Martinez Arias, 1993: 1013–1090; Campos-Ortega and Hartenstein, 1997, The embryonic development of Drosophila melanogaster. 2nd ed.) can be found as synonyms for the relevant terms. Mappings for the general terms to the modern nomenclature are not possible as classification as internal vs external cuts across the modern classification. In such cases one must choose either a more specific term if appropriate, or a very general term for embryonic/larval hypodermal muscle. [obsolete internal muscle]

VFB Term Json

{
    "term": {
        "core": {
            "iri": "http://purl.obolibrary.org/obo/FBbt_00000484",
            "symbol": "",
            "types": [
                "Entity",
                "Class",
                "Deprecated"
            ],
            "short_form": "FBbt_00000484",
            "unique_facets": [
                "Deprecated"
            ],
            "label": "obsolete internal muscle"
        },
        "description": [],
        "comment": [
            "This term comes from Crossley's classification of larval hypodermal muscles (Crossley, 1978, Ashburner, Wright, 1978-1980 b: 499--560). This partially classifies on the basis of whether a muscle is in a layer immediately below the epidermis (external) or under another layer of hypodermal muscle (internal). This system is now little used and was only every very partially implemented in this ontology. Mappings for specific internal and external muscle classes to the modern nomenclature (Bate, 1993, Bate, Martinez Arias, 1993: 1013--1090; Campos-Ortega and Hartenstein, 1997, The embryonic development of Drosophila melanogaster. 2nd ed.) can be found as synonyms for the relevant terms. Mappings for the general terms to the modern nomenclature are not possible as classification as internal vs external cuts across the modern classification. In such cases one must choose either a more specific term if appropriate, or a very general term for embryonic/larval hypodermal muscle."
        ]
    },
    "query": "Get JSON for Class",
    "version": "c58c844",
    "parents": [],
    "relationships": [],
    "related_individuals": [],
    "xrefs": [],
    "anatomy_channel_image": [],
    "pub_syn": [],
    "def_pubs": []
}