Human cerebral arteries were obtained from autopsy, fixed under pressure, cut open, and tacked onto pieces of cork. For one artery the intima was partly teased away, exposing the media, and treated with a silver nitrate process. For another artery the adventitia was exposed. Both arteries were processed through graded ethanols and coated with gold paladium for the scanning electron microscope.The collagen fibers of the adventitia were approximately 5 μm in diameter and consisted of a bundle of microfilaments, each of which had a diameter of 800–1000 Å (1 Å = 10−10 m). The collagen fibers were oriented parallel to the long axis of the artery. The muscle cells of the media had a diameter of 2–5 μm and were arranged circumferentially with a pitch of approximately 20°. The collagen fibers of the media travel perpendicular to the muscle cells, and parallel to the long axis of the artery. The fibrillar components of the elastin in the intima had a diameter of approximately 700–1000 Å and were arranged parallel to the long axis of the artery. It was postulated that the fibrillar part of the elastin was the elastic component of the elastin.