The form of these eminences of insertion varies greatly; sometimes the muscles are inserted by many separate aponeurotic fibres; then they are small, very numerous and form only little asperities imprinted on a greater or less surface; sometimes it is by a single tendon that the muscle takes its origin, then the apophysis is usually very prominent, and occupies a small space. Sometimes a broad aponeurosis gives rise to the fleshy fibres; it is then a bony line, more or less projecting that gives insertion.

The eminences are in general in proportion to the muscles that are attached to them; for example, in three muscles of nearly equal size, one of which is attached by separate fibres, the other by a tendon, and the other by an aponeurosis, we observe that the sum of the asperities of insertion of the first, the separate apophysis of the second, and the prominent line of the third are nearly equal in the quantity of osseous substance that forms them; so that by supposing that the apophysis was divided into asperities, or extended into a line, or that the asperities were united together, or the line concentrated so as to form an apophysis, this quantity of osseous substance would be found to be about the same.

We understand all the advantage of the eminences for the insertion of muscles, which they render distant from the centre of the bone, lessen the parallelism with its axis and consequently favour their motions in an evident manner.

Are these produced by the pulling of the muscles? This opinion borrowed from the laws of the formation of soft and inorganic bodies, does not accord with the known phenomena of vitality, with the existence of eminences where there is no muscular insertion, and which are often more prominent than these, with the disproportion that exists between the elongation of certain apophyses by muscular insertion, that of the styloid, for example, and the force of the muscles that are attached to it, &c.

The eminences for ligamentary insertion have the advantage, by removing a little the ligament from the articulation, of facilitating its motions; this is especially remarkable in the lateral ligaments of the elbow, the knee, &c.

As to the other eminences of insertion, we can hardly consider in a general manner their respective functions.

3d. The eminences of reflection are those under which a tendon passes, in deviating from its primitive course; such is the hook of the pterygoid apophysis, the malleolar extremity of the fibula, &c. Almost all these eminences have a slope or excavation in one direction, connected in the opposite with a ligament, so as to form a ring for the passage of the tendon.

4th. The eminences of impression are those which arise, when the different organs form on the osseous surfaces excavations that separate these eminences, which in fact only appear because the bone at this place remains at its ordinary level. The cerebral and muscular impressions are given as examples of this arrangement. But are these impressions really the effect of the compression of the organs on the bone, or do they arise from the laws of the osseous development, laws which give to the bones forms accommodated to the surrounding organs? I adopt more readily the second than the first of these opinions, which has been thought very probable from the effect of aneurisms upon bones that are contiguous to them, which are worn and gradually destroyed by them. But let us remark that if the muscles, the brain, and the vessels by their pressure, had upon the bones in a natural state, an action analogous to that of aneurism, the state of the parts ought to be the same as in that case. The compact layer ought to be destroyed where these depressions are, and leave in its place an unequal, ragged surface, but the contrary happens, which makes me think, that what is commonly called the impression of organs, is only a natural effect of ossification.

V. Of the Osseous Cavities.

The osseous cavities are very numerous; those only which are found on the exterior of the bones will be treated of. They are divided, like the eminences, into articular and non-articular. The first will be examined, with the analogous eminences, in the chapter on articulations. Among the second there are cavities, 1st, of insertion; 2d, of reception; 3d, of slipping; 4th, of impression; 5th, of transmission; 6th, of nutrition.