wa T adr d aN Frese 
Osteological Symmetry of the Camel. 537 
1. That though the hardness and durability of bones peculiarly 
fit them for inquiries similar to that detailed in these pages ; 
yet as the bones always arise from and are moulded by the 
softer tissues, the whole organic system is determinable in 
its proportions. 
2. That the relation of the forms of extinct animals to the 
forms of animals now living,—the affinities of species and 
genera,—the simultaneous growth of the parts of the same 
animal, and the rates of such growth comparatively in 
other animals ;—the improvement of domestic races,— 
even the structure and development of the human frame,— 
are all matters both of physiological and of numerical 
study. 
‘3. That Zoology is, to an equal extent with the departments of 
knowledge that regard inanimate things, susceptible of 
a classification established on the sure basis of number. 
EDINBURGH, 
November 1830. 
322 TABLES. 
