The short bones are placed in general in parts where are found united mobility and solidity, as in the vertebral column, the tarsus, and the metatarsus. Always small, they are in great number in the regions which they occupy; their number compensates for their size in the formation of the parts of the skeleton to which they contribute. It is this number also, that gives to these parts the union of the two almost opposite attributes of which we have spoken, viz. solidity, because the external efforts are lost in the numerous bands which unite them, and mobility, because the whole of their individual motions gives a considerable general motion.

There is nothing constant or uniform in the external conformation of these bones; it is modified according to the general plan of the whole, of which they are the parts; thus the different uses of the carpus, metacarpus and vertebral column determine the different forms of their respective bones. These bones have always many cavities and eminences upon their external surfaces, necessary for their numerous articulations, for the insertion of the many ligamentary cords that unite them, and the muscles that move them.

In the interior, these bones have nothing peculiar, except an abundance of the texture of the cells which forms them almost wholly, and exposes them to frequent caries.

Nature is not however regular in the division of bones into long, flat and short. Here as elsewhere, she disregards our methodical descriptions, and shows us the bones sometimes exhibiting the character of long ones and short, and sometimes uniting the attributes of both these last with the flat ones. The basilary apophysis and the superior part of the occiput, the body and the lateral portions of the sphenoid, when placed in contrast, prove this assertion. A bone sometimes by its external form belongs to the long ones, but from its internal organization should be classed with the flat, of this the ribs are an example, &c.

IV. Of the Bony Eminences.

The bony eminences have generally the name of apophyses; they are called epiphyses when the cartilage of ossification which unites them to the bone is not yet encrusted with calcareous substance.

These eminences have four great divisions; viz. those, 1st, of articulation; 2d, of insertion; 3d, of reflection; 4th, of impression.

1st. The eminences of articulation vary according as the articulation is moveable or immoveable; I shall not consider them here, as I should be obliged to repeat it in the chapter upon articulations.

2d. The eminences of insertion are very numerous in the bones; they only give attachment to the fibrous organs, as the ligaments, the tendons, the aponeuroses, the dura-mater; no organ differing from these is implanted into the bony eminences, or generally into the bones, except by means of them; the muscles are a remarkable example of this.

These eminences are usually much less in women than in men, in children than in adults, in weak animals than in carnivorous ones who live by attacking and destroying their prey. The prominence of the eminences of insertion is always an index of the force and vigour of the motions. They are the more developed in proportion as the muscles are. Examine comparatively the skeleton of a strong, sanguineous man, whose muscles are powerfully delineated through the integuments, and that of a feeble, phlegmatic man, whose rounded forms like those of women, do not appear prominent, and you will see the difference.