Archive image from page 920 of The cyclopædia of anatomy and. The cyclopædia of anatomy and physiology cyclopdiaofana03todd Year: 1847 moveable cartilages of the nose of other Ver- tebrata ossified and entering into the composi- tion of the facial skeleton. Besides the suborbital chain of bones (g,g,g,g) above mentioned as partially surrounding the orbit, and which in the Gurnards and other hard-cheeked Fishes cover the cheeks as with a bony case, entitling them to the name applied to them by Cuvier of ' joues cuirasses,' another chain of bones called the supra-temporal is not unfrequently me


Archive image from page 920 of The cyclopædia of anatomy and. The cyclopædia of anatomy and physiology cyclopdiaofana03todd Year: 1847 moveable cartilages of the nose of other Ver- tebrata ossified and entering into the composi- tion of the facial skeleton. Besides the suborbital chain of bones (g,g,g,g) above mentioned as partially surrounding the orbit, and which in the Gurnards and other hard-cheeked Fishes cover the cheeks as with a bony case, entitling them to the name applied to them by Cuvier of ' joues cuirasses,' another chain of bones called the supra-temporal is not unfrequently met with, placed on each side, over the interval that separates the external from the middle prominent ridge, developed from the exterior of the cranium so as, together with these projections, to cover the articulation of the supra-scapular bone (46). These bones are evidently peculiar to Fishes, and, like the sub- orbital, must be referred to the exoskeleton and not deemed to belong properly to the osseous system. In this light they will be con- sidered in another place. Fig. 442. Skull of the Crocodile of the Nile. the most complicated condition of this portion of the skeleton. The higher cartilaginous Fishes, however, (Chondropterygii,) form a very remarkable exception; for in the Rays and Sharks the face is reduced to a very simple condition, in consequence of the want of sepa- ration between the different pieces of the skele- ton, consequent on the permanently cartilaginous state of the osseous system in these tribes. The sttliorbital bones in Fishes (Jig. 437, g, g, g, g) form a kind of chain composed of a very variable number of pieces which surround the inferior and external margin of the orbit, covering the muscles of the face instead of giving attachment to them, a circumstance which induced Cuvier to believe that they did not normally belong to the series of facial bones. They are doubtless referable to the exo-skeleton or cuticular bones so largely developed in some


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