676 PHILOSOPHICAL TRANSACTIONS. [aNNO 1683. 



or thigh bones ; s the patella of the hinder legs; t the tibia of the fore leg; 

 V a large protuberancy of the tibia; w the tibia or focile majus of the hinder 

 leg ; X the fibula or focile minus of the hinder leg; y y the tarsus, or instep on 

 both legs ; z the calx, or heel in the hinder leg; ocxa. the bones of the meta- 

 tarsus or foot; e e e the digiti or toes ; yyy the nails. 



Fig. 3, shows the orifice of the scent gland, as it naturally appeared on the 

 outside of the skin of the back ; a little space round this orifice was almost 

 bare of bristles. 



Fig. 4, the scent gland itself; which was conglomerated, or made up of 

 abundance of lesser glandules. 



Fig. 5, most of the viscera in the belly; a the oesophagus, or gullet ; b the 

 first ventricle, or stomach; c the second ventricle, or stomach; dd the cornua, 

 or horns of the second stomach; e the third stomach ; f the pylorus ; ggg the 

 intestina tenuia, or small guts ; hhh the colon ; i the caecum ; k the rectum ; 

 1 the mesentery ; m m the meseraic vessels ; n the pancreas ; o the spleen ; 

 p the liver; q the duct of the gall from the liver to the duodenum. 



Fig. 6, represents the stomach opened ; a the oesophagus or gullet ; b the 

 entrance of the gullet into the first stomach ; c c the inside of the first stomach, 

 which was invested with a strong thick white pellicle or membrane ; dd the 

 second stomach; ee the third stomach, in which were remarkable several plicae 

 or folds ; f the pylorus. 



Fig. 7, represents the outside of the three stomachs, more in their natural 

 situation ; a the gullet ; b the first stomach ; c the second stomach ; d the third 

 stomach; e the pylorus; f ff the blood vessels. 



Fig. 8, represents the genital parts, and the bladder; a the bladder of urine; 

 b the neck of the bladder ; cc the ureters; dd the testes; ee the vasa deferen- 

 tia ; f f the vesiculae seminales, which here were glandulous ; g the caput galli- 

 naginis, where the vesiculae seminales, and vasa deferentia, empty themselves 

 into the urethra; hh two glandulous bodies, which possibly may be reckoned 

 the prostatae; i the orifices by which these glandulous bodies empty themselves 

 into the urethra; k the urethra opened; 1 the penis; mm two muscles belong- 

 ing to the penis; nn other muscles assisting to the same. 



Fig. 9, shows the heart, and the aneurismata of the arteria aorta, or great 

 artery; a the heart; bb the ascending branches of the great artery; c the 

 descending trunk of the great artery ; d the first aneurisma, or distinction of 

 the great artery opened to show its several cells within ; e a straitening of the 

 artery again ; f the second aneurisma opened likewise ; g the third or smallest 

 aneurisma ; hh the iliac branches of the great artery. 



