366 GLOSSARY OF TECHNICAL TEEMS. 



Distal. Remote from point of attachment. 



Dorsal. Pertaining to the back. 



Dorsal Jin. Tlie fin on the back of fishes. 



Emarginate. Slightly forked or notched at the tip ; abruptly narrowed 



or notched toward the tip (said of quills). 

 Endoskdeton. The skeleton proper, — the inner bony framework of the 



body. 

 Epignathous. Upper mandible hooked over tip of lower. 

 Erectile. Susceptible of being raised or erected. 

 Eustachian tubes. Tubes connecting the inner ear with the pharynx. 

 Even (tail). Having all the feathers of equal length. 

 Exoskeleton. Hard parts (scales, scutes, feathers, hairs) on the surface 



of the body. 

 Exserted. Projecting beyond the general level. 

 Extra-limital. Beyond the hmits (of this book). 

 Facial. Pertaining to the face. 

 Falcate. Scythe-shaped ; long, narrow, and curved. 

 Falciform. Curved, like a scythe. 



Fauna. The animals inhabiting any region, taken collectively. 

 Femoral. Pertaining to the femur, or proximal bone of the hinder leg. 

 Fibula. The small outer leg bone. 

 Filament. Any slender or thread-like structure. 

 Filiform. Thread-form. 

 Fissirostral. Having the bill very deeply cleft, beyond the base of the 



horny part, as in the Swallows. 

 Fontanelle. An unossified space on top of head covered with mem- 

 brane. 

 Foramen. A hole or opening. 

 Forehead. Frontal curve of head. 

 Forfcate. Deeply forked ; scissors-Uke. 

 Fossae [nasal). Grooves in which the nostrils open. 

 Fossorial. Adapted for digging. 

 Frontal bone. Anterior bone of top of head. 

 Fulcra. Rudimentary spine-like projections extending on the anterior 



rays of the fins of ganoid fishes. 

 Furcate. Forked. 

 Fusiform. Spindle-shaped; tapering toward both "ends but rather more 



abruptly forward. 

 Ganglion. A nerve centre. 



Ganoid. Scales or plates of bone covered by enamel. 

 Gape. Opening of the mouth. 

 Gastrosteges. Band-like plates along the belly of a serpent; ventral 



plates. 

 Gills. Organs for breathing the air contained in water. 

 Gill arches. The bony arches to which the gills are attached. 

 Gill openings. Openings leading to or from the branchias. 

 Gill rakers. A series of bony appendages variously formed along the 



inner edge of the anterior gill arch. 

 Glabrous. Smooth. 



