The art of taming and educating the horse : with details of management in the subjection of over forty representative vicious horses, and the story of the author's personal experience : together with chapters on feeding, stabling, shoeing, and the practical treatment for sickness, lameness, etc: with a large number of recipes . LATE VII PLATE VIL This plate represents the third phalanx of the colt seen from itslateral, anterior, and inferior faces. Fig. 1. Lateral face. A Base of the pyramidal eminence. B Vascular porosities. C Patilobe eminence. E Pre-plantar fissure. D Basilar process. K Pyr


The art of taming and educating the horse : with details of management in the subjection of over forty representative vicious horses, and the story of the author's personal experience : together with chapters on feeding, stabling, shoeing, and the practical treatment for sickness, lameness, etc: with a large number of recipes . LATE VII PLATE VIL This plate represents the third phalanx of the colt seen from itslateral, anterior, and inferior faces. Fig. 1. Lateral face. A Base of the pyramidal eminence. B Vascular porosities. C Patilobe eminence. E Pre-plantar fissure. D Basilar process. K Pyramidal eminence. R Retrossal process. Fig. 2. Anterior face. A Pyramidal eminence. B Porosities and vascular imprints. C Patilobe eminence. D Basilar process. E Pre-plantar fissure. F Superior border. luferior face. Fig. 3. A Semi-lunar crest. H Plantar fissure. J Imjmnt of the insertion of the perforans. P luferior face. 8 Edge of the jilantar PLATE VIII. PLATE VIII. A comparative view of the bones of the fore and hind feet. Figs. 1 and 2. Bones of the fore foot explained in Plate I. Fig. 3. Coronary bone of the hind foot. Fig. 4. Foot bone and navicular bone of the hind foot, show-ing that the surface of the foot bone, which is artic-ulated with the coronary bone, is rather more con-cave than that of the fore foot, and the position ofthe navicular bone more upright; so that the coro-nary bone bears more upon the foot bone and lessupon the navicular bone. That surface of the na-vicular bone (A B) which in the fore foot wassmooth, appears rough, and the upper ligaments areattached to the whole of this surface. C Portion of the cartilage of the foot bone ossified,which is not natural, but so frequently met withthat I thought it necessary to notice it, merely bygiving an outline of it. See large variety of mor-bid specimens in chapters on Navicular Joint Lame-ness and Laminites.


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1880, bookidartofta, booksubjecthorses