292 



THE HORSE. 



The front is the toe, the back the heel, and the intermediate part 

 the quarter on each side. It is said by Bracy Clark to be a 

 segment of a cylinder, but it is really narrower at the top thao at 



Fig. 13.— the hoop. 



A. Outer surface of crust. 



B. Inner surface of crust. 



C. Upper surface of sole. 



D. Part corresponding with 



the cleft of the frog. 



E. Coronary band. 



Fig. 



-FRONT VIEW OF THE FOOT, WITH THK 

 HOOF REMOVED. 



A. Coronary substance. 



B. Laminas. 



the bottom, and it should rather be described as a section of a 

 truncated cone. When examined from the side, the anterior sur- 

 face should form an angle of about forty-five degrees with the line 

 of the sole, and the upper edge or coronary band should join the 

 sole, so as to leave a moderate substance at the heel; for if too 

 great the foot does not expand, and is liable to disease from that 

 cause ; or if too thin and narrow, the foot is weak and gives way 

 downwards, ending in a convexity of the sole instead of the 

 reverse. The front of the crust is rather more than half an inch 

 in thickness, and in a strong foot of average size gradually 



diminishing to the quarters, at 

 the back of which it is generally 

 barely a quarter of an inch 

 thick, especially at the inner of 

 the two. This proportion is 

 however confined to the fere 

 foot, for in the hind there is 

 little difi*erence between the toe 

 and quarters in point of thick- 

 ness. The superior border, or 

 coronary band, is marked by its 

 whitish color. On its external 

 Fig. 15.— the under surface of tsb foot. surface it resembles the crust 

 A. Cleft of frog. below ; but internally it diflfers 



a cieft^'between heeifl. iQ being smoothly excavated, 



