218 THE SKULL. [CHAP. 



Dolphins is usually divided into two, one of which may 

 represent the lacrymal. The pterygoid bones are thick, 

 produced backwards, meeting in the middle line for a 

 considerable space, concave on their outer side, but not 

 involuted to form an outer wall to the post-palatine air sinus. 

 In some of the Ziphiincz the rostrum is very dense, the 

 anterior prolongation of the mesethmoid being either 

 partially or completely ossified, and ankylosed with the 

 surrounding bones. 



In Hypcroodon, the crest at the vertex is high and mas- 

 sive, being formed by the nasals, the ascending plates of the 

 premaxillas and maxillse, the frontals and supraoccipital. 

 Separated from this crest by a depression, there is on each 

 maxilla, at the commencement of the rostral portion of the 

 skull, a very thick and high longitudinal ridge, which attains 

 an extraordinary development in the old males of the com- 

 mon Northern species. 



An easy transition from this cranium leads to that of 

 the great Sperm Whale or Cachalot (Physefer macrocephalus), 

 which of all Mammals is perhaps the most modified from 

 the ordinary type. The transverse vertical crest and the 

 longitudinal maxillary crests are united to form the walls 

 of a great semicircular basin, surmounting the whole of 

 the back part of the cranium, open only above and in 

 front. The bones composing this wall are the same as in 

 Hypcroodon, but excessively expanded and flattened. The 

 rostrum is broad at the base, gradually narrowing to the 

 front, and immensely elongated. The great supracranial 

 cavity lodges the oily substance which, when refined, is 

 known as spermaceti. 



The skull of the Cachalot is remarkable for its want of 

 symmetry, especially in the region of the anterior narial 

 apertures, of which the left is very much larger than the 



