IO 



VERTEBRATES: MAMMALS. 



sc-cl 



Fi s- J 3- his whole organization 



is adapted to that atti- 

 tude. His brain is the 

 largest in the Animal 

 Kingdom, excepting on- 

 ly that of the elephant 

 and of the whale, and 

 in its organization is 

 far superior to that of 

 any other animal. His 

 face is a model of beau- 

 ty, and endowed with a 

 wonderful power of ex- 

 pression. The hand of 

 man is superior in its 

 structure and in its func- 

 tions to the correspond- 

 ing member of any oth- 

 er animal. Man alone 

 truly speaks a language. 

 Even physically consid- 

 ered, he is the highest 

 possible expression of a 

 vertebrate. But Man is 

 Skeleton of Man. the highest represent- 



cv, cervical vertebrae; sc-cl, scapula and cla- ative of the Animal 



vicle ; h. humerus ; Iv, lumbar vertebrae ; p, pel- -\r i i 



vis; u, ulna; r, radius; c, carpus; ,, meta- Kingdom, not Only On 



carpus; ph, phalanges;/?, femur; t, tibia;/ aCCOUllt of hlS Superior 



fibula ; ts, tarsus ; nit, metatarsus ; ps, phalanges. r , - . , 



form and higher phys- 

 ical organization, but, above all, on account of those high 

 mental and spiritual endowments which belong to him 

 alone, and which enable him to understand and appre- 

 ciate the wonderful and sublime harmonies of the ma- 

 terial and moral world, and his own relations to the 

 Author of Nature and of Revelation. 



