. Comparative anatomy of vertebrates. Anatomy, Comparative; Vertebrates -- Anatomy. SKELETON. 99 the orbitosphenoid to a cartilage plate developed on the otic capsule. The ethmoid parts are complicated, consisting of the two nasal capsules, the septum between them, and, on the inside, coiled turbinal cartilages to support the olfactory membrane. Some of the visceral arches have been mentioned in speaking of the ear bones (p. 74). The pterygoid cartilage is apparently lacking, and there is nothing that can be interpreted as a quadrate except the incus. Meckel's cartilage extends for- ward from


. Comparative anatomy of vertebrates. Anatomy, Comparative; Vertebrates -- Anatomy. SKELETON. 99 the orbitosphenoid to a cartilage plate developed on the otic capsule. The ethmoid parts are complicated, consisting of the two nasal capsules, the septum between them, and, on the inside, coiled turbinal cartilages to support the olfactory membrane. Some of the visceral arches have been mentioned in speaking of the ear bones (p. 74). The pterygoid cartilage is apparently lacking, and there is nothing that can be interpreted as a quadrate except the incus. Meckel's cartilage extends for- ward from the incus to the tip of the jaw. In the procartilage stage the hyoid is continuous with the stapes; later it joins the otic capsule behind the fenestra ves- tibuli, while ventrally it joins its fellow and is connected with the first branch- ial arch by a median cartilage, probably the copula. In the adult the so-called facial bones are more closely related to the cranium than in the lower groups, and distinct bones are fewer than in lower vertebrates, the reduction being due in part to actual loss, in part to the fusion of elements. FIG. 103.—Diagram of the bones of the mammalian skull, altered from Flower. Cartilage bones dotted, membrane bones lined; 2-12, nerve exits. which elsewhere remain distinct. The obliteration of sutures has gone farther in the monotremes and some of the carnivores and apes than elsewhere. Connected with the loss of bones is the absence of the supratemporal arcade, but the infra- temporal bar consisting of processes from the squamosal and zygomatic (malar) is always present, bounding the single temporal fossa. This may be separated from the orbit by a bar formed by zygomatic and frontal, or the bar may be in- complete or absent so that orbit and fossa are one. Usually the bones fuse in such a way that the complexes named on page 66 are readily recognized. The occipitalia are usually united into a single occipital bone, though the sutures between the


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, booksubjectanatomy, bookyear1912