100 BULLETIN: MUSEUM OF COMPARATIVE ZOOLOGY. 
anything except the chorda tympani and palatine VII. A- lange i 
_ proportion of the fibers carried by these rami are for such sense organs, a 
their innervation fields being covered for general sensory purposes by — 
the somatic sensory of V. a 
8. Anolis presents a well-balanced form for the study of the rep- 
tilian nervous system. It is an active, responsive animal with well- 7 
differentiated muscles and sense organs, yet presenting no excessively — 
specialized features. It is small enough readily to be sectioned and — 
large enough for experimental operations, and it is suggested that | 
degeneration and stimulation experiments .on, this form would ad- — 
vance our knowledge of the reptilian nervous organs even more ~ 
than similar anatomical work on other forms. The anatomical work — 
already done, however, should be supplemented by the proper tech-_ 
nique to determine the final nerve terminations. 
