102 GROWTH OF HORNS. 



skin, which wears away ; and after it has remained bare for a 

 certain time, it falls off and gives place to a new horn, which 

 is destined to experience the same changes in its turn. 

 These perishable horns are called antlers ; and they are only 

 found amongst animals of the Stag tribe. In other instances, 

 again, the bony axis grows during the whole of life, never falls 

 off, and is covered with a kind of sheath composed of an elastic 

 substance, named horn, which is analogous to that of the nails, 

 and which increases by different layers. The name of hollow 

 horns is given to these appendages, when thus inclosed in a case 



which seems formed of united 

 hairs ; and we find them amongst 

 the different kinds of Oxen, Sheep, 

 Goats, and Antelopes. It is 

 further to be noticed, that in all 

 these animals, with the exception 

 of the Antelope, the bony core 

 of the horns is hollowed out into 

 large cells, which communicate 

 FIG. 55.-HBAD OF A GOAT. ^fa t h e frontal sinus of the nose, 



and thus receive air into their interior. 



83. The mode of formation and renewal of the kind of horn 

 known under the name of antler, is very simple, and is worthy 

 of notice in this place. At a certain age, there is developed on 

 each side of the frontal bone, a projection, whose formation may 

 be compared to that of the tumours known in medicine under the 

 name of exostoses ; or to that of the callus^ which is deposited 

 around the extremities of the ordinary bones in cases of fracture, 

 and which causes the consolidation. These protuberances, whose 

 tissue is very compact, grow rapidly, and raise up the skin which 

 covers them. This receives a great quantity of blood from 

 numerous vessels which run along the surface ; but there is soon 

 formed, at the base of this bony protuberance, a circle of little 

 eminences, or tubercles, which, by their growth compress the 

 vessels and destroy them. Now when this cutaneous envelope 

 of the horn receives no more blood, it dies, withers away, and 

 peels off. The horn is then laid bare ; and soon experiences the 



