2l8 



SKULL OF ELEPHANT 



Ele/jilias alone survives. This genus also includes many extinct 

 forms, hoth American and European, as well as Asiatic and 

 African. The entirely extinct genera are Stcgodon and Mastodon. 

 The group is clearly one dwindling towards extermination. From 

 the Middle Miocene downwards these great " pachyderms " have 

 existed ; and from the Miocene up to Pleistocene times they were 

 almost world-wide in range and numei-ous in species. 



The genus Elrplias comprises usually large, but occasionally 

 (the pygmy Elephant of Malta) quite small forms. The external 

 features of the genus differ slightly in different species, and will 

 therefore be described in relation to those species which we shall 

 notice here. The vertebral formula is C 7, D 19-20, L 3-5, 

 Sa 4-5, Ca 24-30, or even more. 



The l)odies of the vertel:)rae are remarkable for their shortness 

 and for the very flattened articular surfaces. 



The skull is large and massive. Its large and heavy character 

 is, as has been stated in the definition of the sub-order, due to the 



Fig. IIG. — A section of the craiiiiiiii of a full-grown African Elephant, taken to the left 

 of the middle line, and including the vomer ( Vo) and the mesethmoid (il/A') ; an, 

 anterior, and^j», posterior narial aperture. x ^\. (From Flower's Osteology.) 



immense development of air cavities in the diploe ; the diameter 

 of the wall of the skull is actually greater than that of the 

 cranial cavity. These cavities are not obvious in the young 

 animal. They are most conspicuous in the roofing l)ones of 

 the skull, l)ut are seen elsewhere, and thicken the basis cranii, 



