Fig. 82. Palatal aspect of the cranium and mandible of a Donkey (Equus asinus) × 1/5. (Camb. Mus.)
| 1. supra-occipital. | 6. glenoid surface. |
| 2. occipital condyle. | 7. vomer. |
| 3. basi-occipital. | i 1, i 3. first and third incisors. |
| 4. vacuity representing the | c. canine. |
| confluent foramen lacerum | pm 1, pm 2. first and second |
| posterius and foramen | premolars. |
| lacerum medium. | m 1. first molar. |
| 5. auditory bulla. |
Among the Titanotheriidae Palaeosyops[161] has very brachydont teeth whose crowns have been described as buno-selenodont, the inner pair of columns being bunodont, the outer, selenodont. Similar grinding teeth occur in Chalicotherium. Some of the Titanotheriidae have the regular mammalian series of forty-four teeth.
Subungulata.
Toxodontia. Nesodon has the regular dental formula; its grinding teeth are rooted and the upper ones resemble those of Rhinoceros. The second upper and third lower incisors form ever-growing tusks. There is a marked difference between the deciduous and permanent dentition. Astrapotherium likewise has large rooted cheek teeth of a rhinocerotic type, and each jaw bears a pair of permanently growing tusks, those of the lower jaw being the canines. The dental formula is
i 1/3 c 0/1 pm 2/1 m 3/3, total 28.
In Toxodon the upper incisors and molars are large and curved and all the teeth have persistent pulps. In Typotherium there are no tusks, but the upper incisors are chisel-like, recalling those of Rodents.
The Condylarthra have brachydont, generally bunodont teeth, with the premolars simpler than the molars. They generally have the regular dental formula.
Hyracoidea. The dental formula of Procavia is usually given as i ½ c 0/0 pm 4/4 m 3/3, total 34; in young individuals however there occur a second pair of upper incisors which early fall out. The upper incisors resemble those of Rodents in being long and curved and growing from persistent pulps. They are however triangular in transverse section, not rectangular, having two antero-lateral faces covered with enamel and a posterior face without enamel. Their terminations are pointed, not chisel-shaped as in Rodents. The lower incisors (fig. 83, i 1) are pectinate or partially divided by vertical fissures, and the grinding teeth are of the rhinocerotic type.
| 1. nasal. | 5. jugal. |
| 2. parietal. | 6. lachrymal foramen. |
| 3. external auditory meatus. | i 1. first incisor. |
| 4. paroccipital process of the | |
| exoccipital. |
Amblypoda. Two of the best known forms belonging to this extinct group differ much as regards dentition. For while Coryphodon has the regular dental formula, and the canines of both jaws of moderate size, in Uintatherium the dentition is very specialised, there are no upper incisors, and the upper canines form a pair of enormous tusks. The grinding teeth form a continuous series marked by V-shaped ridges and the dental formula is i 0/3 c 1/1 pm 3/3 m 3/3 total 34.
Proboscidea. The incisors are composed entirely of dentine and have the form of conical tusks projecting greatly from the mouth. In living forms they are confined to the upper jaw, in some species of the extinct Mastodon however they occur in the lower jaw also. In Dinotherium they are probably absent from the upper jaw, but form a pair of downwardly and backwardly-directed tusks growing from the elongated symphysis of the mandible.
The grinding teeth in the various Proboscidea show a very remarkable series of modifications. In Dinotherium they are bilophodont or else are marked by three straight transverse ridges. The dental formula is i 0?/1 c 0/0 pm 2/2 m 3/3, and the teeth have the normal method of succession. In Mastodon as in Dinotherium the grinding teeth are marked by transverse ridges, but the ridges are subdivided into conical or mammillary cusps, and similar cusps often occur between the ridges. These cusps are covered with very thick enamel and the spaces between them are not filled up with cement. There are six of these grinding teeth for each side of each jaw but only three are in place at once. The first three are milk teeth as they may be succeeded vertically by others.
In the true Elephants the number and depth of the enamel folds is much increased, and the spaces between the folds are filled up with cement. A very complete series of extinct forms is known with teeth intermediate in character between those of Mastodon and those of the Mammoth and living elephants. The dental formula of Elephas is
di 1/0 i 1/0 c 0/0 dm 3—4/3—4 m 3/3.
Sir W.H. Flower describes[162] the mode of succession of teeth in Elephants as follows: "As regards the mode of succession that of modern Elephants is as before mentioned very peculiar. During the complete lifetime of the animal there are but six molar teeth on each side of each jaw with occasionally a rudimentary one in front, completing the typical number of seven. The last three represent the true molars of ordinary mammals, those in front appear to be milk molars which are never replaced by permanent successors, but the whole series gradually moves forwards in the jaw, and the teeth become worn away and their remnants cast out in front while development of others proceeds behind. The individual teeth are so large and the processes of growth and destruction by wear take place so slowly, that not more than one or portions of two teeth are ever in place and in use on each side of each jaw at one time, and the whole series of changes coincides with the usual duration of the animal's life. On the other hand the Dinotherium, the opposite extreme of the Proboscidean series, has the whole of the molar teeth in place and use at one time, and the milk molars are vertically displaced by premolars in the ordinary fashion. Among Mastodons transitional forms occur in the mode of succession as well as in structure, many species showing a vertical displacement of one or more of the milk molars, and the same has been observed in one extinct species of Elephant (E. planifrons) as regards the posterior of these teeth."
In the Tillodontia the grinding teeth are of Ungulate type, while the second incisors are large and grow from persistent pulps, so as to resemble those of Rodents.
Rodentia have a most characteristic and very constant dentition, the common dental formula being
i 1/1 c 0/0 pm (0—1)/(0—1) m 3/3, total 18 or 20.
The incisors always have chisel-like edges and persistent pulps, and are separated by a wide diastema from the premolars. Canines are always absent, and there are generally three grinding teeth not preceded by milk teeth; their surface may be grooved, or may be bunodont. Teeth are most numerous in the Duplicidentata (Hares and Rabbits), in which the formula is i 2/1 c 0/0 pm 3/2 m 3/3, total 28, and fewest in Hydromys and certain other forms, in which the formula is i 1/1 c 0/0 pm 0/0 m 2/2, total 12. The hares and rabbits are the only rodents which have well developed deciduous incisors, though a vestigial milk incisor has been described in the Mouse (Mus musculus). The last upper molar of Hydrochaerus is very complicated, its structure approaching that of the teeth of Elephants.
Fig. 84. Carnassial or Sectorial Teeth of Carnivora (from
Flower).
Upper sectorial teeth of I. Felis, II. Canis, III. Ursus. 1. anterior, 2. middle, 3. posterior cusp of blade, 4. inner lobe supported on distinct root, 5. inner lobe posterior in position and without distinct root, characteristic of the Ursidae.
Lower sectorial teeth. 1. Felis, 2. Canis, 3. Herpestes. 1. anterior, 2. posterior lobe of blade, 3. inner tubercle, 4. heel.]
Carnivora have the teeth rooted and markedly diphyodont and heterodont. The canines are greatly developed, and the incisors are small.
In Carnivora vera the incisors are almost always 3/3. The fourth upper premolar and first lower molar are differentiated as carnassial teeth (see p. 436), and retain fundamentally the same characters throughout the suborder. The upper carnassial (fig. 84, I. II. III.) consists of a more or less compressed, commonly trilobed blade borne on two roots, with an inner tubercle borne on a third root. The lower carnassial has only two roots; its crown consists of a bilobed blade with generally an inner cusp, and a heel or talon (fig. 84, 4) behind the blade.
The most thoroughly carnivorous type of dentition is seen in the Æluroidea, and especially in the cat tribe (Felidae). In the genus Felis the dental formula is i 3/3 c 1/1 pm 3/2 m 1/1, total 30. The incisors are very small, so as not to interfere with the action of the large canines, the lower carnassial is reduced to simply the bilobed blade (fig. 84, IV), and the cheek teeth are greatly subordinated to the carnassial. The extinct Machaerodus has the upper canines comparable in size to those of the Walrus.
The Civets and Hyaenas have a dentition allying them closely to the cats. The hyaena-like Proteles has, however, the grinding teeth greatly reduced.
In the Cynoidea[163] the general dentition is i 3/3 c 1/1 pm 4/4 m 2/3, total 42. This differs from the regular mammalian dentition only in the absence of the last upper molar. The upper carnassial tooth (fig. 84, II.) consists of a larger middle and smaller posterior lobe with hardly any trace of an anterior lobe. The lower carnassial (fig. 84, V.) is typical, consisting of a bilobed blade with inner cusp and posterior talon.
The dentition of the Cynoidea is most closely linked with that of the Arctoidea by means of fossil forms.
Fig. 85. Mandible of Isabelline Bear (Ursus isabellinus) × ½.
(Camb. Mus.)
| 1. condyle. | m 1. first molar. The dotted |
| 2. coronoid process. | line is pointing to the posterior |
| i 1. first incisor. | half of the tooth. |
| c. canine. | This specimen has only |
| pm 1, pm 2. first and second | three premolars, there |
| premolars. | should be four. |
In the Arctoidea the dentition is not so typically carnivorous as in the Æluroidea and Cynoidea. In the bears, Ursidae, the molars have broad flat tuberculated crowns (fig. 85). The dental formula in Ursus is i 3/3 c 1/1 pm 4/4 m 2/3, total 42. The upper carnassial (fig. 84, III.) differs from that of the Æluroidea and Cynoidea in having no inner lobe supported on a third root. In the large group of Mustelidae there are generally two molars in the lower and one in the upper jaw. The grinding teeth commonly have large, flattened, more or less tuberculated crowns, and the upper molar may be as large or much smaller than the carnassial.
In the Creodonta there are no specially differentiated carnassial teeth.
Fig. 86. Left mandibular ramus of the Sea Leopard (Ogmorhinus leptonyx)
WITH THE ROOTS OF THE TEETH EXPOSED × 1/3. (Camb. Mus.)
| 1. condyle. | pm 1, pm 4. first and fourth |
| 2. coronoid process. | premolars. |
| i 3. third incisor. | m. molar. |
| c. canine. |
In the Pinnipedia the dentition differs considerably from that of the Carnivora vera. The milk dentition is always vestigial, and the teeth are frequently absorbed before birth. There are four premolars and one molar, forming an uniform series of cheek teeth, all of which except in the Walrus have compressed and pointed, never flattened, crowns. There is no special carnassial tooth, and the incisors are always fewer than 3/3. In Otaria the dentition is
i 3/2 c 1/1 pm 4/4 m 1 or 2/1, total 34 or 36.
In the Walrus the upper canines form immense tusks. The other teeth are all small and one-rooted, and the molars have flat crowns. In the true seals the dentition is strikingly piscivorous, the cheek teeth often having accessory cusps (fig. 86).
The Insectivora are diphyodont and heterodont, having well-developed rooted teeth. The canines are usually weak, the incisors pointed, and those of the two jaws often meet like a pair of forceps. The crowns of the molars are characteristically studded with short cusps. Some genera, such as Gymnura and the mole, Talpa, have the regular mammalian dentition. In the hedgehog, Erinaceus, the dentition is
i 3/2 c 1/1 pm 3/2 m 3/3, total 36.
In the genus Sorex (Shrews) the teeth differ in the following two marked respects from those of most other Monodelphia, (1) they are monophyodont, (2) the lower incisors sometimes become fused to the jaws. Most Insectivora have square molar teeth, but in Potamogale, Chrysochloris, Solenodon and the Centetidae the molar teeth are triangular in section. Four molars occur in Centetes.
In the aberrant genus Galeopithecus the dentition is i 2/3 c 1/1 pm 2/2 m 3/3, total 34. The upper incisors are placed at some distance from the anterior end of the jaw, and the outer upper incisors and canines of both jaws have two roots,—a very unusual character. The lower incisors are deeply grooved or pectinated in the same way as are the lower incisors of Procavia. The upper incisors and canines of both jaws bear many cusps, and are very similar in appearance to the cheek teeth of some Seals.
The dentition of the Chiroptera is diphyodont and heterodont, and the dental formula never exceeds
i 2/3 c 1/1 pm 3/3 m 3/3, total 38.
The milk teeth are very slender and have sharp recurved cusps; they are quite unlike the permanent teeth. The permanent teeth are of two types. In the Insectivorous forms the molar teeth are cusped, and resemble those of Insectivora. In the blood-sucking Vampire bat Desmodus, the teeth are peculiarly modified; the canines and the single pair of upper incisors are much enlarged and exceedingly sharp, while all the other teeth are much reduced in size.
In the Frugivorous bats the molar teeth have nearly always smooth crowns. The dental formula in the chief genus Pteropus is i 2/2 c 1/1 pm 3/3 m 2/3, total 34.
The Primates have a diphyodont and heterodont dentition, generally of an omnivorous type, with cheek teeth adapted for grinding. The incisors are generally 2/2, and the molars, except in the Hapalidae, are 3/3. In the Lemurs the upper canines are large, and the lower incisors slender and directed almost horizontally forwards. The Aye Aye, Chiromys, has the following singular dentition: i 1/1 c 0/0 pm 1/0 m 3/3, total 18. The incisors much resemble those of rodents having persistent pulps, and enamel only on the anterior face.
In Man and in the Anthropoid and Old World Apes the dental formula is always i 2/2 c 1/1 pm 2/2 m 3/3, total 32.
In the Cebidae there is an extra premolar in each jaw bringing the number up to 36. In the Hapalidae, as in the Cebidae, there is a third premolar, but the molars are reduced to 2/2. Man is the only Primate that has the teeth arranged in a continuous series. In all the others there is a gap or diastema of larger or smaller size between the incisors and canines. In all except man also the canines are enlarged, especially in the males.
The Exoskeletal structures of mammals may be summarised in the following table:
I. Epidermal exoskeletal structures.
| 1. | Hairs (a) ordinary hair, |
| (b) vibrissae and bristles, | |
| (c) spines of hedgehog, porcupine, Echidna, | |
| Centetes, Acanthomys. | |
| 2. | Scales { of Manidae, |
| { on tails of rats, beavers, &c. | |
| 3. | Horns of Rhinoceros. |
| 4. | Horns of Bovine Ruminants. |
| 5. | Nails, claws, hoofs. |
| 6. | Spurs of male Ornithorhynchus and Echidna. |
| 7. | Horny beak and teeth of Ornithorhynchus. |
| 8. | Horny pads on jaws of Sirenians and Ruminants. |
| 9. | Baleen of whales. |
| 10. | Enamel of teeth. |
II. Dermal exoskeletal structures.
| 1. | Dentine and cement of teeth. |
| 2. | Bony scutes of Armadillos. |
ENDOSKELETON.
Vertebral Column.
Cervical Vertebrae.
The cervical vertebrae of all mammals have certain characters in common. However long the neck may be, the number of cervical vertebrae, with very few exceptions, is seven. Movable ribs are generally absent, and if present are small and do not reach the sternum. The transverse processes are generally wide but not long, and are perforated near the base by the vertebrarterial canals, through which the vertebral arteries pass; they generally bear downwardly-directed inferior lamellae which are sometimes as in the seventh human cervical seen to ossify from centres distinct from those forming the rest of the transverse process, and are really of the nature of ribs. The atlas and axis always differ much from the other vertebrae.
We may pass now to the special characters of the cervical vertebrae in the different groups. In Monotremes and Marsupials the number of cervical vertebrae is always seven. With the exception of the atlas of Echidna the cervical vertebrae of Monotremes are without zygapophyses. In Monotremes the transverse processes ossify from centres distinct from that forming the body, and remain suturally connected with the rest of the vertebra until the adult condition is reached. The method of the ossification of the atlas in Marsupials varies considerably, thus in some forms such as the Wombats (Phascolomys) there is an unossified gap in the middle of the inferior arch of the atlas, which may remain permanently open; in Thylacinus this gap is filled up by a distinct heart-shaped piece of bone, while in Didelphys and Perameles the atlas is ossified below in the same way as in other mammals. In Notoryctes the second to sixth cervical vertebrae are ankylosed together.
The cervical vertebrae of the Edentata have some remarkable peculiarities. In the three-fingered Sloth, Bradypus, there are nine cervical vertebrae, all except the last of which have their transverse processes perforated by the vertebrarterial canals. In a two-fingered sloth, Choloepus hoffmanni, there are only six cervical vertebrae. In the Megatheriidae, Anteaters (Myrmecophagidae), Pangolins (Manidae), and Aard Varks (Orycteropodidae), the cervical vertebrae are normal, but in the Armadillos (Dasypodidae), and still more in the Glyptodonts, several of them are commonly fused together. The fusion affects not only the centra, but also the neural arches, so that the neural canals form a continuous tube.
In the Glyptodonts there is a complex joint at the base of the neck to allow the partial retraction of the head within the carapace. This arrangement recalls that in Tortoises.
As a rule the Sirenia possess seven short cervical vertebrae, not fused together and not presenting any marked peculiarities. In Manatus however there are only six cervical vertebrae and they are very variable.
Fig. 87. Cervical vertebrae of a young Fin Whale
(Balaenoptera musculus) × 1/10. (Camb. Mus.)
| 1. surface on the atlas for articulation | In the fresh specimen these two |
| with the occipital condyle | transverse processes are united by |
| of the skull. | cartilage, in adult individuals the |
| 2. foramen for exit of the first | whole transverse process is ossified. |
| spinal nerve. | 5. epiphyses of centrum. |
| 3. upper transverse process. | 6. neural spine. |
| 4. lower transverse process. |
In the Cetacea there are invariably seven cervical vertebrae, but they are always very short and are frequently even before birth fused together by their centra into one continuous mass (see fig. 67). Sometimes the last one or two are free. In the Rorquals (Balaenoptera) however, the cervical vertebrae are quite separate and distinct (fig. 87), and in the fluviatile Odontoceti, Platanista, Inia, and Pontoporia, and also in Beluga and Monodon, though very short they are free. In Physeter the first vertebra is free while the others are fused. An odontoid process is not commonly present even in Cetaceans with free cervical vertebrae, but a very short one occurs in the Rorquals. The cervical vertebrae of Rorquals give off on each side two transverse processes (fig. 87, 3 and 4) which enclose between them a wide space. These processes are not completely ossified till the animal is adult.
Fig. 88. Atlas (B) and axis (A) vertebrae of an Ox
(Bos taurus) × ¼. (Camb. Mus.)
| 1. neural canal. | 6. anterior opening of the |
| 2. transverse process. | vertebrarterial canal. |
| 3. surfaces for articulation with | 7. foramen for the exit of the |
| the occipital condyles of | second spinal nerve. |
| the skull. | 8. neural spine. |
| 4. spout-like odontoid process. | 9. postzygapophysis. |
| 5. hypapophysis. |
In all Ungulata the number of cervical vertebrae is seven. Among the Artiodactyla two forms of the odontoid process of the axis occurs; in the Suina and Tragulina it is conical, in the Ruminantia and Tylopoda it is spout-like (fig. 88, 4). The atlas in the Suina and to a less extent in the Ruminantia has long flattened transverse processes, and the remaining cervical vertebrae are opisthocoelous. Those of the Giraffe and Llama (fig. 103) are noticeable for their great length. In the Tylopoda the posterior half of the vertebrarterial canal is confluent with the neural canal.
The Perissodactyla have remarkably opisthocoelous cervical vertebrae. Those of Macrauchenia have the posterior half of the vertebrarterial canal confluent with the neural canal as in Tylopoda. In the Proboscidea they are short flattened discs slightly opisthocoelous; the axis and seventh vertebra and to a less extent the sixth have high neural spines.
In the Rodentia the atlas generally has broad wing-like transverse processes, and the axis a large and long neural spine, while the odontoid process is much developed. In the Jerboas (Dipus) all the cervical vertebrae except the atlas are fused together, a condition recalling that in armadillos.
In the Carnivora the wings of the atlas are well developed (fig. 69, A, 1), and it is deeply cupped for articulation with the condyles of the skull. The axis has a long odontoid process and a high compressed neural spine (fig. 69, B, 4). The third to sixth cervical vertebrae have large transverse processes with prominent perforated inferior lamellae, whose ventral margins in the third and fourth vertebrae diverge as they pass backwards, while in the fifth they are parallel and in the sixth convergent. The transverse processes of the seventh vertebra have no inferior lamellae and are not perforated. Metapophyses are often developed.
In the Insectivora the cervical vertebrae vary considerably. The neural spines except in the case of the axis are generally very small and in the Shrews and Moles the neural arches are exceedingly slender.
In the Chiroptera all the cervical vertebrae are broad and short with slender neural arches.
Primates. In Man the cervical vertebrae have short blunt transverse processes and small often bifid neural spines. The neural and vertebrarterial canals are large. The atlas forms a ring surrounding a large cavity, and has a very slender inferior arch and small transverse processes. Traces of a pro-atlas have been described in Macacus and Cynocephalus. The axis has a prominent spine and odontoid process and short transverse processes. In most Primates the cervical vertebrae are very similar to those of man, but the inferior lamellae of the transverse processes are better developed. In the Anthropoid Apes the neural spines are as a rule much elongated.
Thoraco-lumbar, or Trunk vertebrae.
In the Monotremata there are nineteen thoraco-lumbar vertebrae, sixteen (Echidna) or seventeen (Ornithorhynchus) of which bear ribs. The transverse processes are very short and do not articulate with the ribs, which are united to the centra only.
In the Marsupialia there are always nineteen thoraco-lumbar vertebrae, thirteen of which generally bear ribs. The lumbar vertebrae frequently have large metapophyses and anapophyses, these being specially well seen in the Kangaroos and Koala (Phascolarctus).
The Edentata are very variable as regards their trunk vertebrae. The two genera of Sloths differ much as regards the number, for while Bradypus has only nineteen, fifteen or sixteen of which bear ribs, Choloepus has twenty-seven, twenty-four of which are thoracic, and bear ribs. In Bradypus a small outgrowth from the transverse process articulates with the neural arch of the succeeding vertebra. In both genera the neural spines are all directed backwards.
In the Megatheriidae as in the sloths the neural spines are all directed backwards, and in the lumbar region additional articulating surfaces occur, better developed than are those in Bradypus.
In the ant-eaters (Myrmecophagidae) there are seventeen or eighteen thoraco-lumbar vertebrae, all of which except two or three bear ribs. The posterior thoracic and anterior lumbar vertebrae articulate in a very complex fashion, second, third, and fourth pairs of zygapophyses being progressively developed in addition to the ordinary ones, as the vertebrae are followed back.
In the Armadillos the lumbar vertebrae have long metapophyses which project upwards and forwards and help to support the carapace. In Glyptodon almost all the thoraco-lumbar vertebrae are completely ankylosed together.
In the Manidae there are no additional zygapophyses but the normal ones of the lumbar and posterior thoracic regions are very much developed, the postzygapophyses being semi-cylindrical and fitting into the deep prezygapophyses of the succeeding vertebra.
In the Sirenia the number of lumbar vertebrae is very small; in the dugong there are nineteen thoracic and four lumbar, and in the manatee seventeen thoracic and two lumbar.
In the Cetacea the number of thoracic vertebrae varies from nine in Hyperoödon to fifteen or sixteen in Balaenoptera, and the number of lumbar vertebrae from three in Inia to twenty-four or more in Delphinus. The lumbar vertebrae are often very loosely articulated together and the zygapophyses sometimes as in the Dolphins are placed high up on the neural spines. The centra are large, short in the anterior region but becoming longer behind. The epiphyses are prominent, and so are the neural spines and to a less extent the metapophyses. The transverse processes are well developed, anteriorly they arise high up on the neural arch, but when the vertebral column is followed back they come gradually to be placed lower down, till in the lumbar region they project from the middle of the centra. This can be well traced in the Porpoise (Phocaena). In the Physeteridae the transverse processes of the anterior thoracic vertebrae are similar to those of most Cetacea, but when followed back, instead of shifting their position on the vertebrae, they gradually disappear, and other processes gradually arise from the point where the capitulum of the rib articulates.
Ungulata. In the Ungulata vera the thoraco-lumbar vertebrae are slightly opisthocoelous. The anterior thoracic vertebrae commonly have exceedingly high backwardly-projecting neural spines (fig. 89, 1); but those of the lumbar and posterior thoracic vertebrae often point somewhat forwards so that the spines all converge somewhat to a point called the centre of motion (cp. fig. 101). In the Artiodactyla there are always nineteen thoraco-lumbar vertebrae, and in the Perissodactyla twenty-three.
Procavia sometimes has thirty thoraco-lumbar vertebrae, a greater number than occurs in any other terrestrial mammal; twenty-two of these are thoracic and eight lumbar. In Phenacodus the convergence of the neural spines to a centre of motion is well seen.
Fig. 89. First and second thoracic vertebrae of an Ox
(Bos taurus) × 1/3. (Camb. Mus.)
| 1. neural spine. | 5. facet for articulation with the |
| 2. neural canal. | capitulum of the rib. |
| 3. prezygapophysis. | 6. postzygapophysis. |
| 4. facet for articulation with the | 7. foramen for exit of spinal |
| tuberculum of the rib. | nerve. |
In the Proboscidea there are twenty-three thoraco-lumbar vertebrae, of which nineteen or twenty bear ribs.
In the Rodentia there are generally nineteen thoraco-lumbar vertebrae but occasionally the number rises as high as twenty-five. In the Hares (Leporidae) the number is nineteen, twelve or thirteen of which are thoracic. The anterior thoracic vertebrae have short centra and high backwardly-directed neural spines, the lumbar vertebrae have large forwardly- and downwardly-directed transverse processes with expanded ends. Metapophyses, anapophyses and hypapophyses are all present. In the Agouti (Dasyprocta) the convergence of the neural spines to a centre of motion is very strongly marked.
In the Carnivora the trunk vertebrae are nearly always twenty or twenty-one in number; in the genera Felis and Canis thirteen of these are thoracic and seven lumbar. The anterior thoracic vertebrae have long backwardly-projecting neural spines, while the posterior thoracic and lumbar vertebrae have shorter and thicker neural spines which project slightly forwards. In the Pinnipedia there is no change in the direction of the neural spines, and anapophyses are but little developed.
In the Insectivora the number of trunk vertebrae varies much from nineteen—thirteen thoracic and six lumbar—in Tupaia, to twenty-four—nineteen thoracic and five lumbar—in Centetes. The development of the various processes varies in accordance with the habits of the animals, being great in the active forms, slight in the slowly moving or burrowing forms. In Talpa and Galeopithecus the intervertebral discs of the thoraco-lumbar region instead of being cartilaginous have ossified forming inter centra, a condition met with in very few mammals.
In the Chiroptera there are seventeen or eighteen thoraco-lumbar vertebrae, eleven to fourteen of which may bear ribs. The development of processes is slight.
Among Primates the number of trunk vertebrae is generally nineteen, of which twelve to fourteen bear ribs; in man and the Gorilla and Chimpanzee the number is, however, seventeen, and in the Orang (Simia) sixteen. In some of the Lemuroidea there are as many as twenty-three or twenty-four. In most cases the neural spines converge more or less to a centre of motion, and this is especially marked in some of the Lemurs; it does not occur in man and the anthropoid apes.
Sacral and caudal vertebrae.
At the posterior end of the trunk in all mammals a certain number of vertebrae are found fused together forming the sacrum. But of these only two or three answer to the definition of true sacral vertebrae in being united to the ilia by small ribs. The others which belong to the caudal series may be called pseudosacral vertebrae. In different individuals of the same species it sometimes happens that different vertebrae are attached to the pelvis and form the sacrum. Sometimes even different vertebrae are attached to the pelvis at successive periods in the life history of the individual. This is owing to a shifting of the pelvis and has been especially well seen in man. In young human embryos the pelvis is at a certain stage attached to vertebra 30, but as development goes on it becomes progressively attached to the twenty-ninth, twenty-eighth, twenty-seventh, twenty-sixth and twenty-fifth vertebrae. As the attachment to these anterior vertebrae is gained, the attachment to the posterior ones becomes lost, so that in the adult the pelvis is generally attached to vertebrae 25 and 26. But there are no absolutely pre-determined sacral vertebrae, as sometimes the pelvis does not reach vertebra 25, remaining attached to vertebrae 26 and 27; sometimes it becomes attached even to vertebra 24. This shifting of the pelvis is seen in Choloepus in a more marked degree even than in man.
Of the Monotremata, Ornithorhynchus has two sacral vertebrae ankylosed together, while Echidna has three or four[164].
In Marsupialia as a rule only one vertebra is directly united to the ilia, but one or two more are commonly fused to the first. In the Wombats there may be as many as four or five vertebrae fused together in the sacral region. In Notoryctes there is extensive fusion in the sacral region, six vertebrae, owing mainly to the great development of their metapophyses, being united with one another, and with the ilia, and the greater part of the ischia.
In most Edentata there is an extensive fusion of vertebrae in the sacral region. This is especially marked in the Armadillos and Megatheriidae, and to a less extent in the Sloths and Aard Varks.
In the Sirenia the vestigial pelvis is attached by ligament to the transverse processes of a single vertebra, which hence may be regarded as sacral.
In Cetacea there is no sacrum, the vestigial pelvis not being connected with the vertebral column.
In most Ungulata the sacrum consists of one large vertebra united to the ilia, and having a varying number of smaller vertebrae fused with it behind.
The same arrangement obtains in most Rodentia, but in the Beavers (Castoridae) all the fused vertebrae are of much the same size, the posterior ones having long transverse processes which nearly meet the ilia.
In Carnivora there may be two sacral vertebrae as in the Hyaena, three as in the Dog, four or five as in Bears and Seals.
In Insectivora from three to five are united, while in many Chiroptera all the sacral and caudal vertebrae have coalesced. Among Primates, in Man and Anthropoid Apes there are usually five fused vertebrae forming the sacrum, but of these only two or three are connected to the ilia by ribs. In most of the other Anthropoidea there are two or three fused vertebrae, and in the Lemuroidea two to five.
Free Caudal Vertebrae. The free caudal vertebrae vary greatly in number and character. When the tail is well developed, the anterior vertebrae are comparatively short and broad, with well-developed neural arches and zygapophyses; but as the tail is followed back, the centra gradually lengthen and become cylindrical, and at the same time the neural arches and all the processes gradually become reduced and disappear, so that the last few vertebrae consist of simple rod-like centra. Chevron bones are frequently well-developed.
Of the Monotremes Echidna has twelve caudal vertebrae, two of which bear irregular chevron bones. In Ornithorhynchus there are twenty or twenty-one caudal vertebrae with well-developed hypapophyses, but no chevron bones.
In Marsupials there is great diversity as regards the tail. In the Wombat and Koala the tail is small and without chevron bones. In most other Marsupials it is very long, having sometimes as many as thirty-five vertebrae in the prehensile-tailed opossums. In the Kangaroos the tail is very large and stout. Chevron bones are almost always present, and in Notoryctes are large and expanded.
Most Edentates have large tails with well-developed chevron bones. The length of the tail varies greatly from the rudimentary condition in Sloths to that in the Pangolins, one of which has forty-six to forty-nine caudal vertebrae—the largest number in any known mammal. Chevron bones are much developed, sometimes they are Y-shaped, sometimes as in Priodon, they have strong diverging processes. The caudal vertebrae of Glyptodonts, though enclosed in a continuous bony sheath, have not become ankylosed together.
The Sirenia have numerous caudal vertebrae with wide transverse processes. In the Cetacea also the tail is much developed, and the anterior vertebrae have large chevron bones and prominent straight transverse processes; the posterior caudal vertebrae, which in life are enclosed in the horizontally expanded tail fin, are without transverse processes.
In Ungulata the tail is simple, formed of short cylindrical vertebrae, which in living forms are never provided with chevron bones. The number of caudal vertebrae varies from four, sometimes met with in Procavia, to thirty-one in the Elephant. The tail is exceedingly long in Anoplotherium and in Phenacodus, in which there are thirty caudal vertebrae.
In Rodentia the tail is variable. In the Hares, Guinea pig (Cavia) and Capybara it is very small, in Pedetes and the Beaver it is very long and has well-developed chevron bones.
Most of the Carnivora except the Bears and Seals have very long tails, the greatest number of vertebrae, thirty-six, being met with in Paradoxurus. Bears have only eight to ten caudal vertebrae. Chevron bones are not often much developed.
In Insectivora the tail is very variable as regards length, the number of vertebrae varying from eight in Centetes to forty-three in Microgale.
In Chiroptera the tail is sometimes quite rudimentary, and as in Pteropus, composed of a few coalesced vertebrae, sometimes it is formed of a large number of slender vertebrae.
In Primates also the tail is very variable. In Man all the four caudal vertebrae are rudimentary and are fused together, forming the coccyx. In the Anthropoid apes, too, there are only four or five caudal vertebrae. In many monkeys of both the eastern and western hemispheres the tail is very long, having thirty-three vertebrae in Ateles, in which genus it is also prehensile. Chevron bones are present in all Primates with well-developed tails. In the Lemuroidea the number of caudal vertebrae varies from seven to twenty-nine.
THE SKULL AND APPENDICULAR SKELETON.
The Skull.
Monotremata. In both genera the cranium is thin-walled, has a fairly large cavity, and is very smooth and rounded externally. The sutures between many of the bones early become obliterated in a manner comparable to that in birds, and the facial portion of the skull is much prolonged.
In Echidna the face is drawn out into a gradually tapering rostrum, formed mainly by the premaxillae, maxillae and nasals. The zygomatic arch is very weak, and the palate extends very far back. The tympanic forms a slender ring. The mandible is extremely slight, with no ascending portion, and but slight traces of the coronoid process and angle. The hyoid has a wide basi-hyal and stout thyro-hyals, while the anterior cornua are slender, and include ossified epi-hyals and cerato-hyals.
In Ornithorhynchus the zygomatic arch is much stouter than in Echidna. The face is produced into a wide beak, mainly supported by the premaxillae, between whose diverging anterior ends there is a dumb-bell-shaped bone. The maxillae are flattened below, and each bears a large horny tooth, which meets a corresponding structure borne on a surface near the middle of the mandible. The mandible is considerably stouter than in Echidna, but the angle and coronoid process are but little developed. The infra-orbital foramen and the inferior dental and mental foramina of the mandible are all very large.