OMN1VUUA DIGESTIVE SYSTEM. 



. 77 



FIG. 138. 

 Skull of a flog showing the teeth. 



OMXITOEA. 

 DIGESTIVE SYSTEM. 



In the bog the mouth is large, the labial fissures extending far backwards ; the 

 upper lip is confounded with 

 the snout, while the under one 

 is short and pointed. The 

 canal of Jacobson opens to- 

 wards the front of the hard 

 palate by a small orifice. The 

 tongue and velum palati are 

 like those of the smaller 

 ruminants, but the filiform 

 papillae of the former are 

 more developed. 



The parotid and submacil- 

 lo.ry glands have relative pro- 

 portions similar to those of 

 the ruminant. There ar 



on either 



side ; one long and straight, 

 situated near the angle of the 

 ja\v, and terminating in a 

 /.j duct, which opens near 

 that of the submaxillary ; the 

 other, flat and four-sided, is 

 the true sublingual, and lies 

 in front of the former, open- 

 ing along the lower dental 

 arch by eight or ten ducts. 



The hog is one of the few 

 existing animals which pcs- 

 - what Professor Owen 

 regards as the typical mammalian number of teeth ; its permanent dental 

 formula is this : 



I'IG. 139. 



Stomach of a Hog inflated, a, Cardiac portion ; b, Its 

 accessory cul-d< sac ; c, Fyloric portion; d. Lesser curva- 

 ture ; e, Greater curvature; /, (Esophagus; g, Pyloiic 

 orifice. 



1-1 



3-3 



-3' 



4-4 



= 44. 



The incisors differ from each other in a remarkable degree ; the central and 

 lateral ones in the upper jaw resemble the corresponding ones in the horse, 

 having cavities in their tables, while the upper corner incisors are isolated, and 

 small in proportion to the other four. The central and lateral incisors of the 

 lower jaw are long, nearly straight, projecting forwards, and somewhat resem- 

 bling the incisors of the rodent ; the lower corner incisors are also isolated, 

 but smaller than .those of the upper jaw. The canine teeth are well developed, 

 especially in the male, having the character of tusks ; the luwer ones are the 



