()0 



Art. VI. — Osteology, or External Anatouiy of Insects. — 

 By Edward Newman, Esq., F. L. S. 



{Continued from Vol. I. p. 413.) 



" I find it impossible to give, according to the present state of the science 

 ill England, any satisfactory description of insects without making some previous 

 observations on their anatomical nomenclature." MacLeay. 



"Ce que personne n'avait encore tcnto j'ai ose I'entreprendre. 



Savigny. 



Letter II. — On the Head of Insects. 

 [Read at the Entomological Society ; sitting of the 2d December.] 



Sir, — It has been already stated, that an insect is composed 

 of thirteen segments, and that of these the head is the first. 

 It appears scarcely to admit of a doubt, that the head of an 

 insect is composed of four distinct portions. That the por- 

 tions of the head are merely sections, appears to me consistent 

 with the general harmony of Nature.^ The second segment 

 in the locust tribes, and the third segment in the bee tribes, 

 present to the inquirer a quadruple division by far more mani- 

 fest. You will however remark, and it is of no mean impor- 

 tance, that, while the portions of the second, third, and following 

 segments, are united by suture, those of the head have a freely 

 moveable articulation. That the portions of the head are 

 segments, is argued from the circumstance, that those organs 

 which in one group are employed for manducation, in another 

 serve solely for progression. When this is the case, the organs 

 thus modified differ in no material characters from those of the 

 second, third, and fourth segments. Consequently, it is said, 

 that by their increase of importance to that of true organs of 

 locomotion, they also raise the portions which bear them to 

 an importance equal to that of those portions which uniformly 

 bear such organs. 



These changes in the uses to which organs are applied we 

 frequently detect in progress in intervening groups. They 

 afford the most obvious distinguishing characters. A man 

 is termed a biped ; a horse, a quadruped ; and not in- 

 correctly : yet the number of limbs in each is the same. 

 In man, the first pair of limbs is essential to feeding ; in 



" The segments of the head, which are sometimes three, but typically four, 

 avo tliui'cfore of course only to be considered as secondary.— il/dfAtv/f/. 



