ARSINOITIIERIUM. 
41 
which it reseinl)les for more closely than it does that of the lliiiocerata. The chief 
differences from the carpus of Elei^has seem to be dependent on the circumstance, 
that in Arsinoitherium the distal articulation of the ulna is still larger in proportion 
to that of the radius. Weithofer (Morph. Jahrh. vol. xiv. p. 507) has shown that the 
peculiar condition of the carpus of the Elephant, in which the lunar extends preaxially 
so as to overlap the trapezoid, is due to the preponderance of the share taken by the 
ulna in the formation of the wrist-joint. In ArsinoUkerium this is carried still farther, 
so that the cuneiform extends inwards over the magnum. Whether or not as in 
Elephas the lunar overlapped the trapezoid is uncertain, but probably it did so at 
least anteriorly. In other Ungulates in which the radial portion of the articulation 
becomes the larger, the direction in which the proximal row of carpals becomes displaced 
upon the distal is the opposite one. 
Text-fig. 20. 
B. 
1 . 
Left scaphoid of Arsinoitherium zittcli : A, lunar face ; B, proximal end. 
Z.', upper and lower facets for lunar ; mag., facet for magnum ; r., surface for radius ; 
tz., facet for (?) trapezoid. | nat. size. 
The scaplio'id (text-fig. 20) is greatly compressed from side to side and widens out 
considerably in a fore-and-aft direction from above downwards. The proximal end 
is occupied by a concave surface (r.) for articulation with the postero-internal convex 
portion of the end of the radius. This surface is roughly oval in outline, rather 
broader posteriorly than anteriorly, and with a somewhat flattened outer (postaxial) 
border, immediately beneath which there is a narrow surface [1.) for articulation with 
