Cetacea. In nearly all the Odontoceti the scapula is broad and somewhat fan-shaped; the prescapular fossa is much reduced, and the acromion and coracoid process form flattened processes, extending forwards nearly parallel to one another. Some of the Mystacoceti, such as Balaenoptera, have a broad, fan-shaped scapula, with a long acromion and coracoid process, extending parallel to one another. Others, such as Balaena, have a higher and narrower scapula, with a smaller coracoid process.
In Ungulata the scapula is always high and rather narrow, and neither acromion nor coracoid process is ever much developed. In no adult Ungulate except Typotherium is there any trace of a clavicle, but a vestigial clavicle has been described in early embryos of sheep[171].
Fig. 103. Skeleton of a Llama (Auchenia glama) × 1/18.
(Brit. Mus.)
| 1. hyoid. | 6. olecranon process of ulna. |
| 2. atlas vertebra. | 7. metacarpals. |
| 3. seventh cervical vertebra. | 8. ilium. |
| 4. scapula. | 9. patella. |
| 5. imperfectly ossified | 10. calcaneum. |
| suprascapula. |
Ungulata vera. In the Ruminantia the suprascapular region (fig. 103, 5) is very imperfectly ossified, and when this is removed the upper border of the scapula is very straight (fig. 101, 5). The spine is prominent, and generally has a fairly well-marked acromion. In Hippopotamus the acromion is fairly prominent, but in the other Suina, though the spine is prominent, the acromion is not developed. The Perissodactyla have no acromion, but while the Equidae and Hyracotherium have the scapula long and slender, with the spine very slightly developed, the other living Perissodactyla have the spine prominent and strongly bent back at about the middle of its length.
Subungulata. Typotherium (Toxodontia) differs from all other known Ungulates in having well-developed clavicles; its scapula has a strong backwardly-projecting process, much like that in Rhinoceros.
Phenacodus (Condylarthra), has a curiously rounded scapula, with the coracoid and suprascapular borders passing imperceptibly into one another. The scapula resembles that of a carnivore more than does that of any existing Ungulate.