LOCOMOTION OF FISHES. 245 



the individual economy ; but not, therefore, that it is an absolute 

 elcYation of such parts in tiie scries of animal tissues. 



It has been deemed no mean result of Comparative Anatomy 

 to have pointed out the analogy between the shark's skeleton and 

 that of the himian emlnyo, in their histological conditions ; and 

 no doubt it is a very interesting one. But the perception of 

 such analogy is nf)t incompatible witb the endeavoiu- to gain 

 insight into the purpose of the Creator, in so arresting the ordi- 

 nary course of osteogeny in the highly organised fish. No law of 

 human intelligence condemns it to restrict its cognizance of the 

 pheuomenon, as solely those of an unfinished, incomplete stage of 

 an hypothetical serial dcvelopement of organic forms. 



The predaceous Sharks arc tlie most active and vigorous of 

 fishes ; like birds of prey, they soar, as it were, iu the upper 

 regions of their atmosphere, and, without any aid from a modified 

 respiratory apparatus, devoid of an air-bladder, they habitually 

 maintain themselves near the surface of the sea, by the action of 

 their large and muscular fins. The gristly skeleton is in pro- 

 spective harmony with this moile and s])herc of life, and we shall 

 subsequently find as well-marked modifications of the digestive 

 and other systems of the shark, by Avhicli the body is rendered as 

 light, and the space which encroaches on the muscular system as 

 small, as might be compatible with those actions. Besides, light- 

 ness, toughness, and elasticity are the qualities of the slvcleton 

 m<jst essential to the shark : to yield to the contraction of the 

 lateral inflectors, and aid in the recoil, are the functions which tlie 

 spine is mainly required to fulfil iu the act of locomotion, and to 

 which its alternating elastic balls of fluid, and semi-ossified l)i- 

 concave vertebra;, so admirably adapt it. To have had their entire 

 skeleton consolidated and loaded with earthy matter would have 

 proved an encumbrance altogether at variance with the offices 

 which the Sharks are appointed to fulfil in the economy of the 

 great deep. 



I suspect that those who see in a modification of the skeleton, 

 so beautifully adapted to the exigencies of the highest organised 

 of fishes, nothing more than a foreshowing of the cartilaginous 

 condition of the reptilian embryo in an enormous tadpole, arrested 

 at an incomplete stage of typical dcvelopement, liave been misled 

 by the common name given to the Plagiostomous fishes. The 

 animal basis of the shark's skeleton is not cartilage ; it is not that 

 consolidated jelly which forms the basis of the bones of higher 

 Vertebrates: it has more resemblance to mucus; it requires 1000 

 times its weight of boiling water for its solution, and is neither 



