| Case. | Comp. | Tablet. | Specimen. |
| J | a | 6 | 1—46 |
| 7 | 1— 3 | ||
| 8 | 1 |
Fore-Limb.
HUMERUS.
[Pl. 4.]
There are among the fossils of the Cambridge Greensand at least two well-marked types of Pterodactyle humerus, readily recognised by the forms of the proximal and of the distal ends, and by the positions of the pneumatic foramina. In the group having the ulnar ridge developed the pneumatic foramen is on the posterior aspect of the bone[O] under the ulnar ridge, as in birds; but in some of the small Pterodactyles the foramen is on the anterior surface, and on its radial side. This latter kind of humerus has the distal end more or less divided into three convex surfaces, while the radial crest is enormously developed and terminates in a smooth oblong flattened surface nearly as large as the proximal articular surface, and looking anteriorly. The distal articular surfaces are not as in birds parallel to that of the proximal end, though they agree with those of birds in being at right angles to the radial crest; this ridge in Pterodactyles being directed much further outward and backward than in birds.
[O] Professor Owen states (p. 16, 3d Supt.) that the foramen is palmar. Fig. 15. T. III. 2d Supt. shows it to be anconal.
The largest forms of Pterodactyle all have the distal articular surface flatter, and the proximal articulation less bent back so as to look more upwards. No specimen of this kind of humerus has occurred with the radial crest preserved; but it is apparently carried farther down the shaft and not so far forward as in the other group. This latter kind of bone is shown by Prof. Owen in T. III. figs. 1, 2, 3rd Sup. Cret. Reptiles; the former kind has been illustrated in figure 5 of the same plate.
Some of the most gigantic Pterodactyles appear to have had the limb-bones as solid as those of crocodiles, and unpermeated by air; and there is no evidence that the high Avian characteristics of most of these Greensand fossils also pertained to all the previously known types from the lower secondary rocks.
The osteological series comprises 46 specimens. No. 30 is a nearly perfect right humerus. Nos. 1, 2, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 11, 18, 22, 23, 25, 39 are examples of the proximal ends of left humeri. Nos. 3, 4, 10, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 19, 24, 26, 27, 28, 38, 40, 41 are examples of the proximal ends of right humeri. Nos. 20, 21, 32, 33, 34, 35, 37, 42, 44, 45, are examples of the distal ends of left humeri. Nos. 29, 31, 36, 43 and 46 are distal ends of right humeri.
No. 30 shows the entire length of the humerus to be 21/2 inches. It has a nearly circular shaft with a diameter of a little more than a quarter of an inch, being more slender than the corresponding bone of Pt. suevicus, which has the same length. The proximal articular surface is crescentic, the anterior concavity corresponding with the concave anterior aspect of the proximal end, while the convex border corresponds to the convex posterior side of the bone, which it overhangs: it is worn, but appears to measure half an inch from the radial to the ulnar side. The ulnar ridge (which is worn) has not extended more than a quarter of an inch beyond the articular surface. The thin bird-like radial crest, arising rather more distally than the ulnar ridge, is flat on its posterior surface, and extends anteriorly for a distance nearly half as far again as the length of the proximal articular surface of the humerus. On the proximal third of the posterior face are two contiguous long narrow oblique muscular insertions. The proximal ends Nos. 22, 23, 24, 25 are examples of this kind of bone, having the pneumatic foramen radially situated on the anterior aspect near to the articular surface, as may be seen in No. 24. No. 25 shows the termination of the radial crest in an oblique oblong smooth surface, slightly convex in length and breadth, directed distally towards the ulnar side.
No. 6, 7, 13, 27, are examples of another kind of proximal end, where the pneumatic foramen is an oval hole on the ulnar side of the posterior surface. The radial crest arises more distally, and the ulnar ridge more proximally, than in the small species, like No. 30.