90 THE MYOLOGY OF THE RAVEN. 



third of the blade of the bone. Its fibres converge to 

 pass directly to the corresponding Immerus, to become 

 inserted upon the anconal aspect of the bone, just within 

 the border of the lower part of the pneumatic fossa, 

 below the origin of the deltoid, and between the forks 

 of the external and internal heads of the triceps, which 

 really seems to divide to give it space to make fast 

 to, as shown in the figures. 



58. The teres et infraspinatus 1 is the name I have 



1 As will be seen in my Preface to the present volume, I was 

 far removed from nearly all books, and from all libraries and 

 anatomists, when it was written, and when this muscle was 

 primarily described by me. So when the synonymy of these parts 

 as collected by Gadow recently came to my hands, it was with no 

 little interest that I noted that the muscle now under consideration, 

 as proves to be the case in quite a number of others I was obliged 

 under those cii-cumstances to bestow names upon, had already 

 received the name I coined for it by Tiedemann, by Heusinger, 

 and by Schopss. (14th June, 1889.) 



The following is its synonymy by Gadow (Broun's Klassen des 

 Tkier-Eeichs, vi. Band, pp. 236, 237) :- 



" Tib. M. SCAPULI-HUMERALIS POSTERIOR. 



Sus-suapulaire. Vicq d'Azyr, 1772, p. 631. 

 Schulterblattmuskel. Merrem, p. 154 ; Prechtl, 38. 

 Ober-Schulterblattmuskel. Wiedemann, p. 87. 

 Supra-scapularis (Infraspinatus + teres major). Tiedemann, 256. 



Heusinger, p. 184. 

 Su2yrascapularis. Gurlt, p. 21. 



Untergnitenmuskel. Meckel, System, p. 312, No. 5. 

 Infraspinatus s. teres major. Schopss, p. 105. 

 Infraspinatus. Reid, p. 141 ; Owen, Apteryx, p. 288 ; Watson, 



p. 86. 

 Teres major. Retzius Selenka, p. 113, No. 37 ; De Man, p. 105. 



,, ,, Fiirbringer, Morph. Ja/trb., v. ; Carlsson, p. 19. 



Teres minor. Macalister, p. 16. 

 Le grand rond. Gervais et Alix, p. 22. 



> Alix, p. 394. 

 Scapulo humeral is posterior. Fiirbringer. ' ' 



