1' 



REPTILIA 



imjpressioii on the dorsal side of the centra. With the exception of atlas and axis, all 

 the cervicals bear short, donble-headed ribs, attached directly to the centra. There 

 are about twenty dorsal vertebrae with weU-developed transverse processes and single- 

 headed ribs. The two sacral vertebrae are characterised by having somewhat shorter 

 transverse processes and broader ribs than the rest. There are between thirty and 

 forty caudals, most of which bear short, single-headed ril.is articulated with their centra, 



and chevron bones whose 

 right and left halves do not 

 fuse below. The abdominal 

 ribs are very robust, and 

 consist of a median and three 

 paired lateral series. 



In the pectoral arch (Fig. 

 279) the coracoids are char- 

 acterised by their large size, 

 being considerably longer 

 than broad, and joined in 

 a long median symphysis. 

 There is no sternum, and as a 

 rule no separate interclavicle, 

 but the clavicular arch is 



Fig. 278. 



l-'lesiosaurus macrocephalas, Owen. Lower Lias ; Lyme Regis, 

 Dorsetshire. A, Lateral ; B, Superior ; C, Palatal aspects of skull, Vfi- 

 ag, Angular ; art, Articular ; bocc, Basioccipital ; hs, Basisphenoid ; 

 d, dentary ; ec2)t, Transverse or ectopterygoid ; fr, Frontal ; ipt, Inter- 

 literygoid vacuity ; j, Jugal ; m:e, Maxilla ; nar, External narial opening ; 

 orh, Orbit ;, pa, Parietal ; pas, Parasplienoid ; pin. Pineal foramen ; pi, 

 Palatine ; p^nx, Premaxilla ; prf, Prefrontal ; pt, Pterygoid ; ptnar, Pos- 

 terior nares ; ptf, Postfrontal ; pto, Postorbital ; qj, Quadrato-jugal ; 

 qu. Quadrate ; s, Supratemporal vacuity ; sag, Surangular ; so, Sub- 

 orbital vacuity ; st, Supratemporal or prosquamosal ; sq, Squamosal ; 

 (', vomer (from SVoodward, after Andrews). 



Fig. 279. 



Plesiosauriis laticeps, Owen. 

 liOwer Lias ; Dorsetshire. Pectoral 

 arch, ventral aspect, ^/lo- cZ, 

 Clavicle ; cor, Coracoid ; id, Inter- 

 clavicle ; se. Scapula. 



represented by a single, broad, bilaterally symmetrical bone to which the coracoids and 

 scapulae are firmly united. The latter are somewhat extended ventrally underneath 

 the clavicular arch, but do not meet in the median line. 



The humerus is robust and distaUy much expanded, but without epicondylar 

 foramen or groove. This bone and the femur are noteworthy as exhibiting large, 

 conical epiphyses, similar to those of frogs and certain Chelonians. The radius and 

 ulna are both a little longer than broad. Four elements are usually present in the 

 proximal, and three in the distal row of the carpus ; the five constricted metacarpals 

 are similar in form to the phalanges. The phalangeal formula is inconstant, but the 

 third and fourth digits are always the longest, sometimes comprising as many as nine 

 plialanges. The hind limb difters in no respect from the fore, except that it is slightly 



