DEVELOPMENT OF BONE. 1 5 



the attachment of tendons or ligaments, the term fossa is some- 

 times applied to them. The terms notch and fissure indicate 

 depressions or grooves, which transmit various structures, and the 

 approximation of two notches in contiguous bones sometimes 

 forms a foramen. When we find a depression leading to two or 

 more foramina it may be termed an hiatus. 



Articular eminences. A caput or head is a more or less 

 semi-spherical projection, supported by a roughened and con- 

 stricted cervix or -neck. An ovoid convexity is called a condyle ; 

 and often condyles are found in pairs, the articular surfaces of 

 which may be continuous or separated. A trochlea is an articu- 

 lar surface presenting a pulley-like appearance. 



Articular depressions. A glenoid cavity is shallow, and may 

 be cup-like, while a cavity is called cotyloid when it is deeper. 

 The term facet is often applied to articular surfaces, whicli may be 

 large, but are not well marked either as elevations or depressions. 



The rough irregularities of surface are more distinctly marked 

 in the bones of the horse than in those of most other animals ; 

 their size is always proportionally greater in well-bred animals ; 

 in heavy, coarsely-bred horses, which possess great strength but 

 little activity, they are smaller in proportion to the absolute size 

 of the bones. 



DEVELOPMENT OF BOXE. 



Although the bones of the foal, calf, and young of many other 

 large quadrupeds, possess greater solidity at birth than those of 

 the human infant, yet they all pass through certain progressive 

 stages of development before arriving at that degree of density 

 which they ultimately possess. The tracing of future bone is 

 recognised, about the seventh week of foetal development, in local 

 collections of soft, granular, gelatinous pulp, which becomes 

 gradually flooded with nucleated cells, held together by an opaque, 

 intercellular basis or matrix, which, with the cells equally dis- 

 tributed through it, forms temporary cartilage a material closely 

 resembling in its properties ordinary gristle. 



The process of ossincation, or conversion of cartilage into bone, 

 begins at certain fixed points, and gradually spreads ; these points 

 are called ossijic centres, or points of ossification. When this 

 conversion commences, that part of the cartilage about to become 

 ossified is permeated by large channels for the passage of the 

 blood-vessels which convey the bone-earth ; and the cells, instead 



