,.VATO.MY OF TlIK i'Kj-FOOTf^D BAXDJCOOT. 



79 



trace tho recordH ; and when one eousidf-r.s how very comfortably 

 men and animalb live aft^r its removal one wonderH that it 

 should not be more often abnent. I looked to aee whether there 

 were any signs of the spleen having been removed during life, 

 but coubl find no signs of a scar in the abdominal wall or any 

 traces of ligatured vessicls. 



The Kidneys are in the usual position, the right one t^ inch 

 nearer the head than the left. 



The Adrenals are separate from the kidneys and near the 

 great vessels, the right one slightly more cephalic than the left. 



The Bladder is small and somewhat fusiform in shape, while 

 the Prostate is very large. 



Fig. 10. 



a. Corpus spongiosuiti. ft, y. Cowperian glands. E. Eectuiri. 

 P. Penis. S. Scrotum. 



The Testes are remarkable for their wide separation from^.the 

 epididymes, and there is a distinct fold of visceral tunica vaginali-s 



running from the one to the other. The globus minor of the 

 epididymis is larger than the globus major. 



The Penis has an S -shaped curve, and its terminal portion lies 



LINJf. JOUEN. — ZOOLOGY. VOL. XXIX. 6 



