454 ANATOMY OF VERTEBEATES. 



compact triangular form in the Rattlesnake,' where it is closely 

 attached to the commencement of the intestine, and is perforated Vjy 

 the biliary ducts. The pancreas is small and flattened in Lizards, 

 usually dividing as it recedes from the attachment by the duct to 

 the duodenum into a portion accompanying 

 30G the biliary duct, and another extending to 



or towards the spleen. It is very small in 

 the Iguana. In the Crocodile the pan- 

 creas Is divided into two elongated lobes, 

 and sometimes sends its secretion into the 

 duodenum by two ducts. In Chehjdra 

 serpentina the pancreas extends from the 

 pylorus some inches along the duodenum, 

 dividing and again uniting, forming a loop, 

 and giving off a process which extends to 

 the spleen. In the Turtle ( Chelone Midas) 

 the pancreatic duct terminates on a pa- 

 pilla, whicli projects into the terminal ex- 

 pansion, or 'ampulla,' of the bile-duct. 

 The pancreas in carnivorous Terrapins {Emijs) is more bulky 

 and com])act in form than in the fucivorous Turtles ( CAefowe). 



Thus in the vegetable-feeding Gopher the pancreas is -^^ of 

 the total weight of the animal : whilst in the carnivorous Snapper 

 it is -.\-^ of the total weight of the animal. As the proportion 

 of fat consumed by Carnivora must be greater than that by 

 Herbivora, the results of the above comparative observations 

 accord with the view of the use of the pancreas in preparing 

 fatty matters for absorption.^ 



' XX. vol i. p. 235, no. 778. 



- Dr. Jones, ccxLV. p. 107, ascertained the weight of the body and of the pancreas 

 in several American ReptiUa, and gives the relative weight of the latter in the sub- 

 joined form. 



Number of times 



the "weight 

 of its pancreas. 



