CHAPTER X
DINOSAURIA–CROCODILIA
Sub-Class V.–DINOSAURIA.
Mesozoic, long-tailed, toothed reptiles, with distal ischiadic symphysis, terrestrial limbs, large fixed quadrate bones and bifurcated ribs.
The Dinosaurs begin and end with the Mesozoic epoch, and have a world-wide distribution. The name, "terrible Reptiles," refers to the gigantic proportions which many of them attained, not a few of them surpassing in size and shape the fantastic pictures of the dragons of our fables. Although these creatures came to an end millions of years before the first man-like beings appeared, it is reasonable to suppose that the widely-spread myths of dragons are based upon the accidentally disclosed skeletons of these monsters.
The skull is built after a plan which may be derived from a combination of the Crocodilian and Rhynchocephalian skulls, but the detail varies considerably in the many and much diversified members of this large sub-class. There is as a rule a pre-orbital foramen, which is smallest in the Ornithopoda. The orbit is completely encircled by bones, and the temporal fossa is divided by a squamoso-postfrontal or post-orbital bridge into a smaller supra-, and a much wider infra-temporal portion, the latter being bordered below by the jugal and quadrato-jugal, and this is firmly connected with the quadrate by an ascending process. The quadrate is long, more or less vertical in position, slanting either forwards or backwards, and firmly fixed above by the squamosal, perhaps also by a supra-temporal bone. The orbit is bordered by the jugal, lacrymal, pre- and post-frontals. The interparietal foramen seems to be abolished. Teeth, mostly alveolar and laterally compressed, are restricted to the dentary, maxillary, and premaxillary bones. In the Orthopoda the latter carry no teeth, or these are restricted to the lateral portion, leaving a wide diastema. This toothless part plays upon a peculiar crescent-shaped bone, the so-called predentary, which rests loosely upon the anterior ends of the mandibular rami, which latter do not as a rule form an osseous symphysis. The Ceratopsia possess in addition a similar upper toothless piece, the prerostral, a kind of pre-premaxilla. The morphological value of these extra pieces is quite obscure; they were in all probability provided with thick, horny pads. The bones of the roof of the mouth recall in their arrangement that prevailing in the Rhynchocephalia and the Parasuchia. There are two pairs of large vacuities; one between the maxillae, ectopterygoids and palatines; the other between the latter, the maxillae and the usually small or slender vomers. The pterygoids are perhaps the largest bones, and form a rather long symphysis; laterally and behind they abut against the quadrate, anteriorly against the ectopterygoids and the palatines, which latter they sometimes separate. A peculiar feature of some skulls, e.g. Ceratosaurus and Triceratops is the great size of the groove in which the large hypophysis of the brain is lodged.
The vertebrae are very variable, amphicoelous, opisthocoelous, nearly plain, with a slight concavity behind, or occasionally procoelous in the anterior region of the tail. Besides the usual pre- and post-zygapophyses many Sauropoda and Theropoda possess on the posterior trunk-vertebrae additional joints, effected by a vertical wedge, the hyposphene, which extends backwards from between the post-zygapophyses and fits into a notch between and below the anterior zygapophyses of the next following vertebra. These additional articulations are analogous to the zygosphenes and zygantra of snakes and iguanas, except that in these Sauria the wedges are formed on the opposite, namely the anterior ends of the vertebrae. The vertebrae of the neck and trunk are devoid of intercentra, but those of the tail carry long chevron-bones. The number of sacral vertebrae is generally increased to four or five. The ribs have well-developed capitula and tubercula, and the former have the tendency to shift from the centra or from their parapophysial processes on to the usually much elongated diapophyses of the neural arches. This arrangement, recalling the Crocodilian condition, results in an increased capacity of the dorsal portion of the body-cavity. Intervertebral articulation of the ribs does not occur except sometimes in the sacral region. Abdominal ribs are rare, but they occur in some of the Theropoda, e.g. in Compsognathus.
The sternum seems to have been mainly cartilaginous, with a pair of irregular, disc-shaped ossifications. How the coracoids were attached is unknown; they are small, generally with a foramen, but the scapulae are always very strong and slant backwards. Clavicles and interclavicles seem to be absent.
The fore-limbs are as a rule powerful, although often much shorter than the hind-limbs, which are then enormously developed, and in many genera of two of the main groups show a tendency towards a semi-erect gait. Some of the Dinosaurs, e.g. Iguanodon and Brontozoum, were absolutely bipedal. Others seem to have hopped like Kangaroos. In correlation with this more or less erect mode of progression the iliac bones are very strong, much elongated horizontally, and attached to more than three, often to five or even more, vertebrae. The pubic bones show two main types. Each consists either of a single strong shaft, which is connected distally with its fellow; or (Orthopoda) this main shaft sends out, below its point of contact with the ischium, a long process, the so-called post-pubis, which is directed downwards and backwards. In the latter case it runs parallel and in close contact with the ischium. Such bifurcated pubic bones never meet in the middle line. The ischia, on the other hand, are always connected with each other, not so much by fusion as by syndesmosis.
The hind-limbs exhibit all stages from a simple, plantigrade and five-toed state to a decidedly digitigrade, four, and even three-toed arrangement. Many genera exhibit the tendency to form an intertarsal joint, a feature elsewhere known in birds only, where it is typical and universal. The astragalus sends up an ascending process which tends to fuse with the anterior aspect of the distal end of the tibia, and the calcaneum is sometimes more or less firmly attached to the fibula. In Compsognathus even the distal tarsalia have begun to fuse with the metatarsalia, so that this reptile at least has a typical intertarsal joint. The femur is remarkable for the frequent possession of a "fourth" trochanter on the middle of the inner aspect of the shaft, undoubtedly for the insertion of the long caudi-femoral or long adductor muscle.