MIL] RECAPITULATION. 495 



(8) The shortness of the foot compared with the length 



of the pelvic limb minus the foot, and compared 

 with that of the tibia. 



(9) The great breadth of the lowest part of the tuberosity 



of the os calcis. 

 (10) The flattened surface, for the hallux, of the ento-cunei- 



form bone. 

 (i i) The fact of the first or second digit being the longest 



one of the foot. 



(12) The absolute size of the hallux, and especially of its 



second phalanx. 



(13) The very slight outward direction of the great toe 



(which is not prehensile) and the great proportion 

 borne by it to the longest digit. 



(14) The small proportion borne by the four outer digits of 



the foot to the whole foot and to the metatarsal 

 bones. 



(15) The successive decrease in length of the tarsus, meta- 



tarsus, and digits. 



(16) That the cervical spines, above the seventh, are short 



and usually bifurcate. 



(17) The occipital condyles being more anteriorly situate 



on the basis cranii. 



(18) That the cranio-facial angle varies from 90 to 120. 



(19) The cerebral cavity being more than T.\ times the 



length of the basi-cranial axis. 



(20) That the superciliary ridges are little developed. 



(21) That the maxillo-premaxillary suture is not visible on 



the face of the skull, even at birth. 



(22) That he has a nasal spine. 



(23) The distance between the zygomata, where widest, ex- 



ceeding but little the greatest transverse diameter of 

 the bony brain-case. 



(24) That there is a large vaginal ridge to the petrous bone, 



and a long styloid process. 



(25) That his jaws are relatively small. 



(26) That hair is very little developed on the surface of the 



body, and is deficient on the back, though ordinarily- 

 abundant on the head. 



(27) That there is an extensor primi internodii pollicis 



muscle, and also a peroneus tertius. 



(28) The flexor pollicis longus and the flexor longus digi- 



torum perforans being completely separate. 



(29) That the solcus has a tibia] as well as a fibular origin. 



