24 
CENTRAL HALL. 
Bay L mere hooks, by which the creature hangs back-downwards from 
Manmals°^ the boughs of the trees, among which it passes its entire existence. 
4. The Baboon serves as an example of an animal walking on 
all four limbs in the "plantigrade" position, i.e., with the whole of 
the palms of the hands and soles of the feet applied to the ground. 
5. A small species of Antelope shows the characteristic form 
of a running animal, in which the limbs perform no office but 
that of supporting the body on the ground. It stands on the 
tips of the toes of its elongated slender feet. 
6. A Porpoise, adapted solely for swimming in the water. 
The fore limbs are converted into flattened paddles, and the 
hind limbs are entirely absent, their function being performed 
by the tail. The rudimentary pelvic bones are preserved. 
The rest of the case is occupied by details of the skull in some 
of its principal modifications. At the top are diagrams showing 
the structure of bone and cartilage as shown by the microscope. 
In the wall-case on the opposite (north) side of the bay the 
outline of the osteology of mammals is continued by illustrations 
of the structure of the limbs. At the top of the case is a 
diagram showing the correspondence of the hand and the foot 
in its complete typical form, with the names applied by 
anatomists to the different bones. The series of specimens 
below show the principal deviations which actually occur from 
the typical condition, which, as will be seen, is very nearly 
preserved in the human hand. One interesting series shows 
some of the stages of modification for special purpose (specializa- 
tion) by which a typical five-fingered hand becomes converted 
into that of the single-fingered Horse, and another series ends with 
the hand of the ruminants, with only two fingers remaining, some- 
times, but erroneously called a " cloven hoof." Similar changes 
are shown in the toes of the hinder extremity, illustrating the 
same common plan running through infinite modifications in 
detail, enabling the organ to perform such a variety of purposes, 
and to exhibit such diversity of outward appearance. The 
existence of this common plan is now generally thought to be 
due to inheritance from a common ancestor. 
In tlie lower part of the case are examples of all the different 
kinds of articulations or joints by which the various bones of the 
body are connected together. 
