SYNONOMY OF THE FISH SKELETON 5II 



Squafna tetnporis. Hallmann. 



Squatnosal. Huxley. 



Tempo?-ale. Vogt and Yung. Not temporal of Geoffrey, No. 



5, nor of Cuvier No. 17. 

 Zitsenbein. Meckel. 



10. Opisthotic. Parker, Huxley. 

 Felsenbein. Oken. 



Inter calare. Segemehl. 



In-rupeal. Geoffroy. 



Mastoideum. Bojanus, Kostlin. Not mastoid of Owen, No. 9. 



Oberjldchliche Knochen-lamelle. Stannius. 



Os innominatiim. Hallmann.^ 



Otosteal. Owen. 



Petrosal. Owen. Not petrosal oi Segemehl, No. 15. 



Rocher. Cuvier. 



Rocher rudimentaire. Agassiz. 



11. Exoccipital. Owen, Giinther, Parker. Not exoccipital of 



Geoffroy, No. 7. 

 GeleJiktheil. Meckel. 

 Gelenktheil des Jwiterhauptbems., condyloidea ossis occipitis. 



Erdl. 

 Occipital lateral. Cuvier, Agassiz. 

 Os occipitale laterale. Stannius, Vogt and Yung. 

 Suroccipital. Geoffroy. 

 Seitlichen untern Hinterhauptbeine. Meckel, Wagner. 



12. Basioccipital. Owen, Parker, Giinther. 

 Basilaire. Cuvier, Agassiz. 



Basiltheil des hinterhauptbeins basilar is ossis occipitis. Erdl. 



Basisphenal. Geoffroy. 



Corpus ossis occipitis. Hallmann. 



Hinterhauptbeinkorper . Wagner. 



Os basilare. Stannius. 



Otosphenal. Geoffroy. 



13. Parasphenoid.^ Huxley, Parker. 



Basisphenoid (the posterior half). Owen,^ Giinther. Not basi- 

 sphenoid of Huxley, No. 14. 



^ Hallmann has also used this term for basisphenoid No. 14. 



2 "The bones of fish and amphibians usually denominated vomers must 

 part with their claims to that title and yield it to the so-called parasphenoid." 

 Sutton in Proc. of the Zool. Soc. London, 1SS4, p. 570. 



'Owen and Cuvier give the opposite ends of the paraspkenoid different 

 names. 



