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The town is said to have been founded by Pleuron, son of Aetolus.
The pleura are usually small or hidden in some species, with each pleuron having a single spiracle.
In many species the coxa has two lobes where it articulates with the pleuron.
It is often divided into two lobes by an inflexion of its wall where it articulates with the pleuron.
In direct muscle, the connection is directly from the pleuron (thoracic wall) to individual sclerites located at the base of the wing.
Stratonice, a daughter of Pleuron and Xanthippe.
The last tablets at Pylos, for instance, speak of rowers being drawn from five places to go to Pleuron on the coast.
Among adult insects, an appendage is normally attached to its segment between the pleuron of its side and the sternum.
According to said author, he dwelt in the country between Pleuron and Calydon and dedicated most of his time to hunting.
The pleuron (pl.
He was married to Pronoe, by whom he had two sons, Pleuron and Calydon.
She married Aetolus and bore him Pleuron and Calydon.
When the pleuron as a whole is fused with the sternum the combined sclerite is known as the pectus.
In crustaceans, it is known as a pleuron when it overhangs the insertion of the limb on each side as a free plate.
The two lateral regions are called the pleura (singular: pleuron) and the ventral aspect is called the sternum.
The shell around each somite can be divided into a dorsal tergum, ventral sternum and a lateral pleuron.
Another platoon and another, Aetolians of Pleuron and Kalydon.
The generic name is derived from Greek poikilos, "varied", and pleuron, "rib", a reference to the three types of rib present.
In many of the higher insects the pleuron is usually connected and fused with the tergum by downward prolongations of the prescutum and postnotum.
The notopleuron is a thoracic pleurite (a sclerite on the pleuron) situated at the end of the transverse suture of Diptera.
In this case the sclerites composing the tergum are known as tergites, those of the sternum as sternites, and those constituting each pleuron as pleurites.
Sclerites that are subdivisions of the major regions are tergites, sternites and pleurites, for the respective regions tergum, sternum and pleuron.
The notum is the top most or dorsal area, the sternum is the lower or ventral side, and the pleuron is the sides where the legs are attached.
Ovid briefly mentions a certain Combe of Pleuron, surnamed Ophias ("daughter or descendant of an Ophius"?)
In insects with an incomplete metamorphosis, the wings develop externally and appear in the early instars along a line where the suture between tergum and pleuron later develops.