PHYLOGENY OF THE PALZOGNATHA AND NEOGNATH 2. 201 
nasals and the free end of the inner spur of the lachrymal. In Dromeus the relations 
are similar, but the nasal spur is shorter. 
In Casuarius the forward extension of the frontal is curtailed, since it terminates 
with the mesethmoidal region of the orbital plate, at the level of the origin of the 
antorbital plate. ‘The greater part of its mesial border is much thickened and inflated ; 
this region being involved in the formation of the casque, and representing its hindmost 
postero-lateral boundary. In some species this inflation of the bone extends backwards 
as far as the parietals. 
Furthermore, it is significant to note the fact that the frontals fail to meet in the 
middle line anteriorly, where they under-floor the median ossification of the casque 
(Pl. XLIV. fig. 4). Thus a portion of the ventral border of the casque comes to take 
part in the formation of the roof of the cerebral fossa. It would seem, from this, as 
though this secondary ossification was gradually engrafting itself more and more 
completely upon the skull, by absorption of the underlying bone in much the same way 
as bone has replaced cartilage in other cases in the cranial skeleton. 
The extreme anterior end of the mesial border of the frontal is gently hollowed out 
so as to form the external lateral boundary of the superficial lozenge-shaped plate of 
the mesethmoid. 
In Apteryx the frontal presents one or two points of difference from that of the 
remaining forms associated herewith. 
Its mesial border joins its fellow of the opposite side, and its hinder border is 
bounded by the parietal, as usual. Its postero-ventral or lateral border joins the 
aliethmoid. Immediately in front of this, the frontal sends downwards and inwards a 
narrow plate of bone which, eventually, meets its fellow of the opposite side in the 
middle line, immediately behind the crista galli. From the outside, this orbital plate 
of the frontal gives off a short slender plate to the aliethmoid. 
Cephalad of this orbital plate is a deep notch, the supra-orbital fontanelle, This 
fontanelle is bounded anteriorly by a narrow bar of bone, called the descending process 
of the frontal, which at its ventral extremity joins the aliethmoid. Mesiad of this 
bar—between its upper and the outer wall of the aliethmoid—the orbito-nasal nerve 
passes from the orbit to the nasal cavity. 
The squamosal, in all the forms herein dealt with, entirely conceals the pro- and 
opisthotics. In the embryo Dromeus, which forms the subject of this paper, it is almost 
quadrangular, its antero-ventral angle is produced into a blunt process which extends 
downwards to the level of the quadrato-jugal articulation. This downward process of 
the squamosal is thickened on its inner surface and so closely applied to the quadrate 
as to render it immovable. 
In the embryo skulls of Dromeus, the squamosal and the parietal are connected 
by means of a close suture, the juxtaposition of the two elements forming a perfectly 
level surface. Posteriorly the squamosal rests upon the outer border of the exoccipital, 
and later fuses therewith. Similarly the squamosal, anteriorly, rests upon the ali- 
