The horse, its treatment in health and disease with a complete guide to breeding, training and management (1906) (14780646584)
Zusammenfassung
Identifier: horseitstreatm09axej (find matches)
Title: The horse, its treatment in health and disease with a complete guide to breeding, training and management
Year: 1906 (1900s)
Authors: Axe, J. Wortley
Subjects: Horses
Publisher: London, Gresham Pub. Co.
Contributing Library: NCSU Libraries
Digitizing Sponsor: NCSU Libraries
Text Appearing Before Image:
e Eoyal Agricultural Society froman article on the structure of the horses foot by Profes.sor Sir Geo. T.Brown, and publi-shed in the Societys Journal, 1891. In fig. 658 both man and horse have the foot placed as it is in nature. 490 THE HORSES POSITION IX THE ANIMAL WORLD Man presents the entire under surfaces of the bones of the tarsus (hock ofthe horse), with the metatarsal bones and the four phalanges, to the groundsurfoce, while the horse stands on the fourth or terminal phalanx. Fig. 659shows the positions reversed; the foot of the man has the points of thetoes on the ground in a position corresponding to that which is naturalin the horse, and the horse is supposed to be in the impossible positionof having the whole of the bones from the point of the hock to the lastphalanx of the toe on the ground as in the foot of the man. The teachingof the diagram is that for the horse to exhibit a perfect foot, the bonesbelow the carpus (knee) and the tarsus (hock) would have to be included
Text Appearing After Image:
Fiff. 659.—Foot of Man and Foot of Horse Compared (positions reversed)(Note position of ground surface in each case.) The names of the several bones are given below fig. 658 on the preceding page in the structures of the organ; instead of this being the case, it isobvious that what is called the foot of the horse only includes the twolast phalanges. It will be noticed in comparing the above illustrations with theskeletons in fig. 655, page 486, that in man the bones of the leg (the tibiaand fibula) up to the knee, and the thigh-bone (femur) from the kneeto the hip-joint, form a column which is nearly a straight line. Thelimbs of the horse, on the contrary, present very decided angles at severalpoints, chiefly at the shoulder, elbow, hip, stifle, and hock joints; andalso from the fetlock-joints to the ground surface, an arrangement whichis eminently calculated to give freedom of movement, and at the sametime lessen the effect of concussion. Muscular System.—The bones of the skeleto
- Human foot and horse leg. - Pinterest
- Human foot and horse leg. - Pinterest
- Horse Leg ClipArt ETC, 44% OFF
- Horse Leg ClipArt ETC, 43% OFF
- Horse Leg ClipArt ETC, 52% OFF
- The Horse : its treatment in health and disease, with a ... - Alamy
- The horse, its treatment in health and disease with a complete guide ...
- Horse Leg ClipArt ETC
- Hippology, Horse Judging & Quiz Bowl - Weebly
- Image details - Alamy