i6o 
UNGULATES. 
of the crescents turned outwardly. In the lower jaw the molars are narrower, and 
with a reverse structure; that is to say, the crescents are on the outer side of the 
tooth, with their horns turned inwardly. Accordingly the name of crescent-toothed 
(selenodont) Ungulates is applied to all the ruminating members of the group. 
It is important to observe that the true Ruminants are alone characterised 
by the whole of the four under-mentioned features, viz. no front teeth in the 
upper jaw, a four-chambered stomach, complete cannon-bones, and the feet encased 
in hoofs. Moreover, it is only in the members of this group that horns are ever 
met with ; these appendages being always arranged as a symmetrical pair (occasion¬ 
ally two pairs) on either side of the middle line of the skull. 
Hollow-Horned The hollow-horned Ruminants, or Bovidoe, are distinguished from 
Ruminants, their allies by the presence of true horns; that is to say, of hollow 
and unbranched sheaths of horn growing upon bony protuberances, or cores, arising 
from the frontal bones of the skull, as shown in the figure on p. 159; neither 
the horny sheaths nor the bony cores being shed at any period of existence. In 
all existing wild species these horns are present at least in the male sex; but in 
many domesticated races of cattle, sheep, and goats, they are absent in both sexes; 
and the same holds good for certain extinct members of the family. Usually the 
molar teeth of the hollow-horned Ruminants are characterised by the great relative 
height of their crowns, as shown in the figures of the molar teeth of the nilgai 
given on p. 155; and in all cases there is no tusk or canine tooth in the upper jaw. 
In some few instances the small lateral toes may be completely absent, but they are 
generally represented merely by the small spurious liooflets alone, which may be 
supported internally by minute and irregularly-shaped nodules of bone. 
The hollow-horned Ruminants are chiefly Old World forms, although they are 
represented in North America by the musk-ox, the American bison, the Rocky 
Mountain goat, and the bighorn sheep. They are quite unknown in the southern 
half of the New World. 
The Oxen. 
Genus Bos. 
The oxen include the largest and most massively-formed members of the 
hollow-horned Ruminants, and comprise not only the animals thus commonly 
designated, but likewise the bisons, yak, and buffaloes. As a rule, they are large 
and heavily-built animals, with very short and thick necks, and the massive and 
relatively short head carried nearly in the line of the back; the males generally 
being provided with a large dewlap, running along the throat from the chin to 
between the fore-legs. The tail is always long, and is generally thinly haired 
throughout the greater part of its length and tufted at the extremity, but in the 
yak it is thickly haired throughout. The muzzle is broad, naked, and moist; and 
there are never any “ tear-pits ” or glands below the eye, which are so frequently 
present in the antelopes; and in consequence of the absence of these tear-pits 
there are no depressions in the skull immediately below the eyes for their recep¬ 
tion. The horns, which are present in both sexes and of nearly equal dimensions 
in both, may be either cylindrical or more or less markedly angulated; and are 
