BADGERS. 
35 
tooth, this expanded heel having to bite against the enlarged upper molar tooth. 
The skull of the badger is also peculiar on account of the close interlocking of the 
lower jaw with the skull proper, the articulation being so perfect that it is im¬ 
practicable to detach the one from the other without fracture. Needless to say, it 
is, therefore, impossible for one of these animals to dislocate its lower jaw. 
In general bodily conformation the Old World badgers very closely resemble 
their transatlantic ally; and their hairs are similarly banded with different colours, 
producing the well-known grizzled hue of the fur so characteristic of all these 
animals. The skin of the common badger is remarkably large and loose, enabling 
severe. Then, again, the upper molar tooth, instead of being triangular and of 
nearly the same size as the flesh-tooth, is oblong in form, and very much larger 
than the latter, recalling in this respect the corresponding tooth of the bears; a 
further analogy with that group being presented by the small size of the first 
three premolar teeth. Another feature in which the true badgers differ from the 
American badger is to be found in the great development of the posterior heel of 
the lower flesh-tooth, which exceeds in length the whole of the remainder of the 
THE COMMON BADGER (l Hat. size). 
