HairA hair is a development, in the form of a cylinder, of a cap of corneous epidermis surmounting a papilla of the dermis sunk to the bottom of a tubular pit, or involution of the skin, called a hair-follicle. In the upper part of the hair-follicle the walls consist of the ordinary skin with all its parts, dermis, Malpighian layer, and corneous layer, the latter as usual of considerable thickness. At some little distance from the mouth of the follicle the corneous layer suddenly ceases, and in the follicle below this, the epidermis is represented by the Malpighian layer, now called the outer root-sheath, and two layers of peculiar cells, forming the inner root-sheath, of which the outer is called Henle's and the inner Huxley's layer; these may, perhaps, be considered as corresponding to the stratum granulosum and the stratum lucidum respectively. The dermis of the wall of the follicle is at the same time developed into an outer layer with bundles of connective tissue disposed chiefly longitudinally, and an inner layer of peculiar nature, the arrangement of which is transverse, and which at least simulates, if it really be not, a muscular transverse coat. Between this dermis of the follicle and the outer root-sheath or Malpighian layer is a very conspicuous definite hyaline basement membrane, so thick that it presents a very easily recognized double contour.
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