66 
RODENTS. 
mentioned. The feet are usually furnished with five toes, which generally terminate 
in sharp claws, although they sometimes have broad nails. In walking, either the 
whole or the greater part of the sole of the foot is applied to the ground, so that 
these animals may be described as entirely or partially plantigrade. Rodents are 
nearly always furnished with collar-bones (clavicles), although these may be more 
or less imperfectly developed, and are 
thereby broadly distinguished from all 
living Ungulates. Their skulls are 
characterised by the condyle of the 
lower jaw being elongated from front 
to back, instead of from side to side, and 
thus permitting of that backwards-and- 
forwards motion of the lower upon the 
upper jaw, which is so noticeable when 
we watch a rabbit feeding; this char- 
side view op the skdll of the prairie-mahmot. acter serving to distinguish Rodents 
alike from Ungulates and from Carni¬ 
vores. Another point in connection with the skull is that the cavity for the eye 
is not separated behind by a bar of bone from the temporal fossa; this feature 
serving to distinguish the Rodents from the aye-aye, in which the eye-socket is 
surrounded by a bony ring. 
The teeth being; so important in the definition of the Rodents 
Teeth • 0 1 
require somewhat fuller consideration. With regard to the incisors, 
it may be observed that these teeth are of great length, and curved nearly in the 
arc of a circle; their inserted portion extending far backwards in the jaws, so that 
in the upper jaw it comes nearly in contact with the base of the first of the cheek¬ 
teeth, while in the lower jaw it runs beneath the whole of the cheek-series. The 
lower incisors form a small segment of a very large circle (roughly speaking), while 
the upper ones constitute a much greater segment of a far smaller circle. In the 
great majority of Rodents the enamel on the incisor teeth is confined almost 
exclusively to their front surface, and is generally thicker on one side than on the 
other; but in the hares and rabbits it also extends somewhat on to the lateral 
surfaces. In cross-section these teeth are somewhat triangular; the front enamel- 
covered surface being broad and flattened, and the two lateral surfaces gradually 
converging to a rounded posterior edge. Whereas, however, the inner surface, 
which comes in contact with the tooth on the opposite side of the jaw, is nearly 
flat, the outer surface is convex. As a natural result of the front surface of these 
teeth being composed of the hard enamel (which is very frequently of an orange or 
reddish colour), whereas the remaining portion consists of much softer ivory, it 
follows that the effect of wear is to produce a sharp chisel-edge at their summits. 
Indeed, the structure of an incisor tooth of a Rodent is precisely analogous to a 
chisel; the hard enamel corresponding to the steel with which the latter is faced, 
and which forms the cutting edge, while the ivory represents the soft iron forming 
the support to the thin plate of steel. As these incisor teeth are continually grow¬ 
ing, they always present the same chisel-like edges, which are worn away by use 
at a rate commensurate with that of the growth. It follows from this that if one 
