MOLAR TEETH OF THE MAMMALIA EDUCABILIA. 265 



seen in Hippopotamus in the increase in development of the lat- 

 eral or first and fourth digits, thus equaling the number in the 

 fore-foot of Tapirus and Menodus, though preserving the equal- 

 ity of the two median digits. But an inequality of these digits 

 appears in the genera Anoplotherium and CcenotTierium, as has 

 been stated* in the following language : "In Anoplotherium se- 

 cundarium the digit ii is developed in each foot, though not 

 nearly so long as Hi, which is nearly symmetrical in itself. There 

 is an approach to the same structure in the manus of Ccenothe- 

 rhc7n." The only ajDproximation to the Proboscidian type is to be 

 seen in the shortening of the metapodial bones in Hippopotamus, 

 a point of very inconsiderable value. 



Perissodaciyla. — Approximation to the preceding order is 

 made in the anterior foot of Menodus, in which, according to 

 Marsh, there are four toes of nearly equal size.f Approximation 

 to the ProhoscidiaX is seen in Symhorodon, where the cuboid facet 

 of the astragalus is rather larger than in Rhinoceros, and devel- 

 oped much as in Bathmodon ; the small third trochanter of the 

 femur is also much like that in Bathmodon. The osseous horn- 

 cores may be compared with those on the front of Loxolophodon, 

 The knee was probably free from the integument of the abdomen, 

 as in Proboscidians. In all other respects there is no approxima- 

 tion to this order. 



Prohoscidia. — The approximations to other orders in the 

 structure of the feet are only to be seen in the Eocene genera 

 Bathmodon and Eobasileus. The latter, or its ally Uintatherium, 

 presents, according to Marsh, but four toes on the hind foot ; the 

 anterior lias five. In the former point we have a resemblance to 

 Hippopotamus, but one of little significance, in view of the radical 

 differences between the two in the form of the astragalus, cal- 

 caneum, and cuboid bones. The former is essentially Proboscidian 

 in all respects, with the addition of a cuboid facet alongside of 

 and behind the navicular, as in Symiorodon ; thus constituting a 

 Perissodactyle character, but leaning to the forms of that order 

 which betray probably the closest, though slight, approach to the 

 omnivorous division of the Artiodactyla. Thus, while the TJinta- 

 theriidm present the Proboscidian type of feet and molar dentition, 



* Huxley, "Anatomy of the Vertebrated Animals," p. 321. 

 f "American Journal of Science and Arts," 1873, p. 486. 



J This should be Amblypoda, not separated from the Proboscidia at the time 

 this was written. (Ed. 1886.) 



