268 THE ARM AND FORE- ARM. [CHAP. 



the middle of the lower end, between the condyles, and 

 above the thickened articular border, the bone is very thin, 

 having a hollow both in front and behind. The latter, 

 which is the deepest, is called the anconeal fossa, as it 

 receives a projecting part of the anconeal process, or ole- 

 cranon, of the ulna, when the fore -arm is fully extended. . 

 It often happens that these two fossae are so deep that they 

 meet, and there is in consequence a vacuity in the bone 

 called the supratrochkar or inter condylar foramen. There is 

 usually a prominent ridge running upwards for some distance 

 on the shaft from the external condyle, called the ectocondylar 

 or siipinator ridge (sr\ which affords a wide surface of origin 

 for the supinator muscles of the fore-arm. When much 

 developed this ridge terminates above at the groove for the 

 passage of the musculo-spiral nerve. When the edge of the 

 bone above the inner condyle is much developed, it is some- 

 times grooved, but more often obliquely perforated from 

 above, downwards and forwards, by a sitpracondylar foramen 

 (cf\ through which the median nerve and brachial artery 

 may pass. Lastly, somewhere towards the anterior sur- 

 face of the middle of the shaft, on the outer side, there is 

 usually a roughened, elevated, longitudinal ridge (dr), some- 

 times developed into a tuberosity, for the insertion of the 

 deltoid muscle, and hence called the deltoid ridge. The 

 lower end of this ridge is separated from the upper end of 

 the supinator ridge by a wide and shallow groove, winding 

 in a spiral manner downwards and forwards round the outer 



bones, is transferred from the distal articular prominence of the humerus 

 to the processes for attachment of muscles above the joint surfaces. 

 I have found it convenient in comparative osteology to indicate the 

 homologies of the ' external condyle ' and ' internal condyle ' of the 

 human humerus by the terms ' ectepicondyle ' and ' entepicondyle ' 

 (Owen)." By French anatomists they are called epicondyle and epi- 

 trochlea respectively. 



