George B. Bridgman - Constructive Anatomy
George B. Bridgman - Constructive Anatomy
George B. Bridgman - Constructive Anatomy
LIBRARY of the
UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO
by
B.
George Bridgman
Instructor in Drawing and Lecturer
on the Construction and Anatomy of t lie
Human Figure, Art Students' League,
New York
Pelham, N. Y.
A
Copyright by George B. Bridgma
Pdham, N. Y., 1920
"Dedicated
to
<J5fv
THE AUTHOR desires to acknowledge his indebtedness
to Dr. Ernest K. Tucker for his assistance in the prep-
aration of the text, and to Mr. A. Wilbur Crane for
f
12 1
CONSTRUCTION
MASSES AND MOVEMENTS OF THE BODY:
TILTING OF THE MASSES
CONSTRUCTION
TIIK HORIZONTAL, SAGITTAL AND TRANSVERSE
PLANES: TILTED AND TWISTED
[16
The Hand
ANATOMY
In the hand are four hones, continuous with those
of the fingers, called metacarpals (meta, heyond,
carpus, wrist). They are covered by tendons
on
the hack, and on the front by tendons, the muscles
of the thumb and little finger, and skin pads.
There is a very slight movement like opening a
fan between these bones. They converge on the
wrist bones and are morticed almost solidly to them.
The hand moves with the wrist. The dorsal tendons
converge more sharply than the bones.
The short muscles of the hand, crossing only one
joint, the knuckle, and moving the fingers individ-
ually, lie dee]) between the metacarpal bones
and so
are called interossei. They are in two sets, back
and front, or dorsal and palmar. The palmar inter-
ossei are collectors, drawing the fingers toward the
middle finger, and so are fastened to the inner side
of each joint except that of the middle finger itself.
The dorsal interossei are spreaders, drawing away
from the centre, and so are fastened to both sides
of the middle finger and to the outside of the other
joints. In the thumb and little fingers the muscles
of this set are called abductors, and being in ex-
posed positions, are larger. That of the first finger
forms a prominent bulge between it and the thumb;
that of the little finger forms a long fleshy mass
reaching to the wrist.
MASSES
The masses of the hand are two one that of the
hand proper, the other that of the thumb.
[18]
The first is beveled from knuckles to
of these
wrist on the edge; from wrist to knuckles on the
flat side, and from first to little finger from side
ANATOMY
Morticed \vith the hones of the hand are the hones
of the wrist; the two make one mass, and the hand
moves with the wrist.
MASSES
Its width is twice its thickness. It is narrower
both ways where it joins the arm, giving an appear-
ance of constriction.
There is always a step-down from the back of
the arm, over the wrist, to the hand.
MOVEMENTS
Being solid with the hand, the wrist moves with
the hand on the forearm. Its movement is like
[20]
movement at all. This movement is accomplished by
the forearm.
The inset of this boat-shaped joint with the arm
[21]
THE HAND
[22]
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THE HAND
[241
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THE HAND
MUSCLES OF THE HAND, front palmar ;
1 Abductor pollicis.
4 Lumbricales.
5 Annular ligament.
6 Flexor brevis minimi digiti.
26
THE HAND
[28
THE HAND
MUSCLES OF BACK OF HAND :
2 Abductor pollicis.
3 Dorsal interossei.
[30]
THE HAND
WEDGING OF THE WRIST: THUMB SIDE
[32]
THE HAND
WEDGING OF THE WRIST: LITTLE FINGER SIDE
34
THE HAND
CONSTRUCTION
In the hand as in the figure there is an action and
an inaction side. The side with the greatest angle
is the action side, the opposite is the inaction or
straight side.
With the hand turned down (prone) and drawn
toward the body, the thumb side is the action side,
the littlefinger the inaction side. The inaction side
is straight with the arm, while the thumb is almost
at right angles with it.
[36]
V \
A
THE HAND
[38]
THE HAND
40]
THE HAND
[42]
THE HAND
TURNING OF THE MASSES OF HAND AND WRIST
44
THE HAND
MASSES OF FINGERS, HAND AND WRIST:
STEP-DOWN, WEDGING, INTERLOCKING
[46]
THE HAND
INTERLOCKING OF HAND AND WRIST:
LITTLE FINGER SIDE
[48]
The Thumb
$
[50]
inside, toward the index finger (flexor brevis).
Between the thumb and first finger the skin is
raised into a web, which is bulged, especially when
the thumb is flattened, by the adductor policis
muscle.
MASSES
The thumb is pyramidal at the base, narrow in
the middle, pear-shaped at the end. The ball faces
to the front more than sideways. It reaches to the
middle joint of the first finger.
MOVEMENTS
The last joint has about one right angle of move-
ment, in one plane, and may by pressure be twisted
toward the fingers.
The heavy middle joint moves less freely, also
limited to one plane.
The joint of the base is a saddle joint, with
movement like one in a saddle, that is, with easy
bending sideways, less easy forward and back ;
[52]
THE THUMB
MUSCLES OF THE THUMB, palmar view:
2 Abductor pollicis.
3 Apponens pollicis.
[54]
V
THE THUMB
The Fingers
ANATOMY
Each of
the four fingers has three hones ( pha-
langes, soldiers). Each phalanx turns on the one
ahove, leaving exposed the end of the higher hone.
There are no muscles below the knuckles hut the ;
[58]
joints the tendon makes a depression or groove in
the centre of the joint.
The masses of these segments are not placed end
to end, as on a dead centre, either in profile or in
back view. In the back view, the fingers as a whole
arch toward the middle finger.
In the profile view, there is a step-down from
each segment to the one beyond, bridged by a wedge.
A series of wedges and squares thus marks the
backs of the fingers. Into the square of the knuckles
a blunt wedge is seen to enter from above. From it
a long tapering wedge arises and enters the square
of the middle joint, from which a blunt wedge also
reaches backward. Another tapering wedge arises
here and moves half way down the segment. The
whole finger tapers from the middle joint, to be-
come embedded in a horseshoe form holding the
nail. This form begins back of the root of the nail
and bevels to below its end, at the tip of the finger.
The whole last segment is a wedge.
The palmar webbing opposite the knuckles, which
reaches to about the middle of the first segment of
the finger, in front, bevels backward and points to
the top of the knuckle in the back.
The segments of individual fingers are of dif-
ferent lengths, those of the middle finger being
longest. From tip to base, and on into the bones of
the hand, the segments increase in length by definite
proportions.
MOVEMENTS
Each joint moves about one right angle except
the last, which moves slightly less; and limited to
one plane, except the basal, which has also a slight
lateral movement, as in spreading the fingers.
59]
FINGERS
PAD BETWEEN THUMB AND FIRST FINGER:
i First dorsal interosseus.
60]
v
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FINGERS
MECHANISM OF THE FIRST FINGER
[62
FINGERS
CREASES
While the segments of any finger, seen on the
back, are of different lengths, the pads seen on the
palmar side are of the same length, including the
pad of the base which is part of the palm, so that
the creases between them are not
opposite the all
[64]
FINGERS
1 Dorsal interossei of the hand.
2 Tendons, finger, dorsal side.
[66
L4 1\-K
The Forearm
It forms a
hinge joint and moves in the bending of
the elbow. The other slides as the hinge moves.
This second bone the radius, or turning bone;
is
[
68 ]
superficiallythe pronator teres (round), whose
turning function requires it to lie diagonally across
toward the thumb side.
The outer condyle is hidden by its muscular mass
when the hand is turned out. This mass is the
extensor-supinator group, which bulges higher up,
and becomes tendinous half way down. It is
MASSES
The masses of the forearm will be described in
connection with those of the arm and shoulder.
The Arm
ANATOMY
The bone of the upper arm is the humerus. The
part facing the shoulder is rounded and enlarged
to form the head, where it joins the shoulder blade.
The lower end is flattened out sideways to give
[ 69 ]
attachment to the ulna and radius, forming the con-
dyles. The shaft itself is straight
and nearly round,
and is entirely covered with muscles except at the
condyles.
On the front side of the condyles, reaching
flat
1 Humerus.
2 Biceps.
3 Brachialis anticus.
5 Flexors, grouped.
6 Supinator longus.
72
THE ARM
SUPIXATIOX AND PkOXATION OF TIIK FOREARM.
front view :
1
Supinator longus.
2 Pronator radii teres.
3 Flexors, grouped.
(74]
THE ARM
MASSES OF THE ARM, FOREARM AND WRIST
WEDDING AND INTERLOCKING
[76]
THE ARM
MUSCLES OF THE ARM, lateral view
thumb side toward the body)
( :
1 Coraco-brachialis.
2 Biceps.
3 Brachialis anticus.
4 Supinator longus.
7 Flexors, grouped.
781
THE ARM
TURNING OF THK HAND ON THE FOREARM
AND THE FOREARM ON THE ARM
[80]
THE ARM
MUSCLES OF THE UPPER LIMB, outer view:
1 Triceps.
2 Supinator longus.
4 Anconeus.
5 Extensors, grouped.
EXTENSOR GROUP
FROM EXTKKXAI. COXDYLE OF HUMERUS
Extensor Digitorum Communis From external
:
[82]
THE ARM
MUSCULAR MASS OF FOREARM, back view:
[84]
THE ARM
WEDGING OF THE ARM INTO THE FOREARM,
back view
86]
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THE ARM
WEDGING OF ARM INTO THE FOREARM
AT THE ELBOW:
1
Biceps.
2 Triceps.
3 Supinator longus.
4 Flexors.
5 Extensors.
THE ARM
90
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THE ARM
MUSCLES OF THE ARM, inner view
1
Triceps.
2 Biceps.
3 Supinator longus.
4 Flexors, grouped.
5 Pronator teres.
FLEXOR GROUP
FROM INTERNAL CONDYLE OF HUMERUS
92
j
THE ARM
94]
The Shoulder
ANATOMY
Form isgiven to the shoulder by the deltoid
(triangle) muscle.
An almost perfect triangle is this muscle, its apex
downward and wedging into the outer groove of
the arm, its base upward and bent around to attach
to the shoulder girdle. Just below the base is a
ripple which marks the head of the arm bone.
The shoulder girdle is made up of the collar bone
and a ridge of the shoulder blade, meeting. They
both point outward, the ridge a bit the lower, but
both turn straight forward before meeting.
The collar bone is an S-shaped bone, its outer
curve and tail made by this forward turning. Over
the point of union is a flat space. From the hollow
of this S-curve a groove sinks first downward and
then at an angle outward, marking the border be-
tween the shoulder and the great breast muscle.
Behind the inner two-thirds of the collar bone
is a triangular depression between it and the
trapexius muscle behind; its base to the neck, its
apex pointing outward.
MOVEMENTS
In the shoulder are found two joints. At the point
of the shoulder is the joint between shoulder blade
and collar bone, a Hat hinge pointing straight for-
ward, allowing the shoulder blade to slide freely
over the surface of the back.
flat
[96]
the back, but may even lift from it at the point and
inner edge, slightly amplifying its range.
Below it under the deltoid is the joint of the
shoulder blade with the humerus or arm bone, the
shoulder proper, facing sideways and a little for-
ward. It is a universal joint, with a right angle
and a half of movement in two planes but its sweep ;
MASSES
The masses of the shoulder, arm, forearm and
hand do not join directly end to end with each other,
but overlap and lie at various angles. They are
joined by wedges and wedging movements.
Constructing these masses first as blocks, we will
have the mass of the shoulder, or deltoid muscle,
with its long diameter sloping down and out, beveled
off at the end: broad side facing up and out;
its
[97]
half, smaller than the upper, has its narrow edge
forward, its broad side facing out (with the hand
held thumb up).
These blocks are joined by wedges and wedging
movements, and to the straight lines are wedded
the curved lines of the contour of the muscles. The
deltoid is itself a wedge, whose apex sinks into the
outer groove of the arm half way down. The mass
of the biceps ends in a wedge which turns outward
as it enters the cubital fossa.
The mass of the forearm overlaps the end of the
arm on the outside by a wedge (supinator longus)
that arises a third of the way up the arm, reaches
a broad apex forearm
at the broadest part of the
and tapers to the wrist, pointing always to the
thumb; and on the inside by a wedge that rises back
of the arm and points to the little finger flexor- (
pronator muscles).
In the lower half of the forearm, the thin edge of
the mass, toward the thumb, is made by a continua-
tion of this wedge from the outside; while the thin
edge toward the little finger is made by the end of
the wedge from the inside.
When the elbow is straight and the hand turned
in, the inner line of the forearm is straight with that
of the arm. hand is turned out, this line
\Yheii the
is set out at an angle that corresponds with the
width of the wrist. The little finger side (ulna)
being the hub of its movement.
The flexor tendons on the front of the forearm
point always to the inner condyle; the extensor
tendons on the back point always to the outer
condyle.
The breadth of the hand corresponds with that
of the lower mass; not joining it directly, but with
a step-down toward the front.
[98]
In the back view of the arm, the mass of the
shoulder sits across its top as in the front view.
The back edge of this mass is seen to be a truncated
wedge arising under the deltoid and focusing on the
elbow. The upper end resolves itself into the three
heads of the triceps ;
the lower or truncated end is
The Armpit
[99]
THE SHOULDER
MECHANISM OF THE ARMPIT, front view:
1 Biceps.
2 Triceps.
3 Latissimus dorsi.
4 Teres major.
5 Deltoid.
[
I02
THE SHOULDER
MKCHANISM OF THE SHOULDER, back view:
1 Deltoid.
2 Triceps.
3 Teres minor.
4 Teres major.
[104]
The Neck
the skull.
From bony prominences back of the ears two
muscles (sterao-mastoid), aptly called the bonnet-
string muscles, descend to almost meet at the root
of the neck, forming a triangle whose base is the
canopy of the chin.
In this triangle below is the thyroid gland, larger
which lifts the skin into high folds and draws down
the corners of the mouth. It carries the imagination
back to the time in evolution when bared teeth were
important weapons of defense.
[106]
THE NECK
MUSCLES OF THE NECK:
1 Sterno-cleido-mastoid.
3 Trapezius.
[ 108
THE NECK
TONGUE-RONK AND LARYNX
1 Hyoid hone.
2 Thyroid cartilage.
5 Stylo-hyoid.
(>
Sterno-hyoid.
7 Omo-hyoid.
8 Sterno-cleido-mastoid.
9 Trapexius.
[no]
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THE NECK
MUSCLES OF NECK
Platysma Myoides: A sheathing from chest and
shoulder to masseter and corner of mouth.
Action: Wrinkles skin of neck, draws down corner
of mouth.
[112]
The Head
[114]
stant for a given race or a given age of evolution.
Individual variations occur, but they are less than
the standard.
This angle is less in the older and evolved
less
["51
BLOCKED
CONSTRUCTION OF THE HEAD
in
THE HEAD
EMINENCES. RIDGES AND DEPRESSIONS
OF THE SKULL
[118]
)
V
THE HEAD
THE ANGLES OF CONSTRUCTION
1 20 ]
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THE HEAD
MUSCLES OF MASTICATION:
1 Temporal.
2 Masseter.
\.
THE HEAD
CONSTRUCTION LINES IN PERSPECTIVE
MASSES
The masses of the head are the cranium, the
skeleton of the face, and the jaw.
Into the rounded mass of the cranium sets the.
narrower mass of the forehead bounded by the
temples at the sides and by the brows below.
From the lower outer corners of the forehead the
wedge of the cheek bones begins; moves outward
and downward until it just passes the curve of the
cranium, then down and in, in a long sweep, to the
corner of the chin.
Outside of and behind this lower line is another
wedge, that of the corner of the jaw, with the line
itself for base, and a very low apex.
The two cheek bones form together the central
mass of the face, in the middle of which rises the
nose.
124
V
THE HEAD
PLANES
The plane of the forehead slopes upward and
backward to become the cranium; and the sides turn
[ 128;
\
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The Eye
f '301
is spread over the
eyeball by the constant winking
of the upper lid. The thin film of liquid thus kept
there reflects light perfectly from its surface.
The lashes, projecting from the margin of the
lids, serve both as curtains to shade and as delicate
feelers to protect the eye.
The immovable masses of the forehead, nose and
cheek bones form a strong setting for this most
variant and expressive of the features.
COMPARISONS
In looking at any feature one naturally compares
itwith his concept of the average of such features,
or with some mental standard or ideal.
The variations of such features will then fall
into classes which represent the more usual varia-
tions thereof.
or penciled.
Lids may be thick or although the upper lid
thin,
is always thicker along margin, and always pro-
its
'34]
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THE EYE
[136]
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The Nose
COMPARISONS
Average variations in noses divide them into
classes.
[ 138 ]
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THE NOSE
CARTILAGES OF THE NOSE:
1 Upper lateral.
2 Lower lateral.
3 Wing.
4 Septum.
140
The Ear
2 Anti-helix.
3 Tragus.
4 Anti-tragus
[ 142 ]
The Mouth
The Chin
[146]
The Trunk front view
ANATOMY
The upperpart of the body is built around a bony
cage called the thorax, conical in shape, and flat-
tened in front. The walls of this cage are the ribs,
twelve on each side, fastening to the spine behind
and to the sternum or breast bone in front. The
upper ribs are quite short and make a small circle:
they grow longer until the seventh, which is the
COLLAR ROXK
Tothe breast bone at the top of this cone the
collar bones are attached, lifting the whole mass
[148]
With the shoulders, it is a wedge with the apex
downward. The profile of the sides forms a wide
wedge, buttressed by a mass of lateral muscles over
the iliac crest.
The front surface, formed mainly by the pectoral
and rectus abdominis muscles, forms a much more
slender wedge. Its upper third bevels more sharply
in, as far as the lower border of the breast muscle,
I H9 1
Although the shoulders are freely movable,
changing the lines of the first mass, and bulging
the pectoral muscles, yet the mass itself changes
littleexcept the slight change in respiration. Even
in respiration the upper portion, as far as the level
of the epigastric pit, changes little; the lower ribs
perform most of the respiratory movement.
Centering on this pit is the abdominal arch, made
of the cartilages of the false ribs. At its centre,
the end of the breast bone (ensiform cartilage)
hangs pendent on either side the arch descends
;
[150!
THE TRUNK
cLKS OK THE TRUNK, front view:
1 Pectoralis major.
2 Deltoid.
3 Rectus abdominis.
4 Serratus magnus.
5 External oblique.
[ '52]
/
SKELETON OF THE TRUNK
MUSCLES COVERING UPPER PORTION, front view:
1 Pectoralis minor.
2 Pectoralis major.
154
, THE TRUNK
TRUNK, front view
[156
The Torse
PROFILE
The erect torse presents in profile the long curve
of the front, broken by depressions at the border
of the breast muscle and at the umbilicus or navel
into three lesser curves, almost equal in length. The
back presents the sharp anterior curve of the waist,
opposite the umbilicus, bending into the long pos-
terior curve of the chest, and the shorter curve of
the buttocks. The former, that of the chest, is broken
by the almost vertical shoulder blade and the slight
bulge of the latissimus below it.
In profile the torse presents three masses: that of
the chest, that of the waist, and that of the pelvis
and abdomen. The first and last are comparatively
unchanging.
Above, the mass of the chest is bounded by the
line of the collar bones; below, by a line following
the cartilages of the ribs, being perpendicular to the
long diameter of the chest.
This mass is widened by the expansion of the
chest in breathing, and the shoulder moves freely
over it, carrying the shoulder blade, collar bone.
and muscles.
It is marked by the
ridge of costal cartilages that
forms its border, sloping up and forward, and by
the ribs themselves, sloping down and forward, and
by the "dictations" (finger marks) of the serratus
magnus (big saw-toothed) muscle, little
triangles
in a row from the corner of the breast muscle,
paralleling the cartilages of the ribs, disappearing
under the latissimus.
['58|
Below, the mass of the pelvis and abdomen slopes
up and forward. It is marked by the iliac crest and
hip, described later. In front
be flattened by
it
may
contraction of the abdominal muscles. Over its sur-
face the hip moves freely, changing the tilt of the
pelvis.
Between these the central mass contains the waist
vertebrae, and is very changeable. Practically all of
the movement of flexion and extension for the
whole spine occurs here, and much of the side-
bending.
This mass is marked by a buttress of lateral
muscles, slightly overhanging the pelvic brim and
bearing inward against the side above. It changes
greatly in different positions of the trunk.
[i59]
the processes of the vertebrae in this section are
plainly indicated.
The spinal furrow becomes deeper as it reaches
the lumbar vertebrae, where it is marked by dimples
and depressions. It widens out, too, in this part of
the body, and as it passes over the surface of the
sacrum to the coccyx it becomes flattened. The
average length of the spine is about two feet three
inches.
The outer corner of the shoulder girdle is the
acromion process, which is the high outer extremity
of a ridge rising from the shoulder blade. The
shoulder blade or scapula (spade) is a flat plaque
of bone fitting snugly against the cage of the thorax,
having a long inner vertical edge, parallel to the
spine; a sharp lower point; a long outer edge point-
ing to the arm pit and a short upper edge parallel
:
MOVEMENTS
Movement and extension occurs almost
of flexion
lumbar vertebrae. Movement
entirely in the waist or
of side-bending occurs throughout the whole length.
Movement of rotation occurs in the lumbar verte-
br;e when the spine is erect, in the middle vertebrae
when it is half flexed, in the upper vertebrae when
the spine is fully bent. In the lumbar vertebrae, the
axis of this rotation is behind the spine in the mid- ;
161 ]
THE TRUNK
THE TRUNK, side view:
1 Latissimus dorsi.
2 External oblique.
[
162
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THE TRUNK
MUSCLES OF THE TRUNK, back view:
1
Trapezius.
2 Deltoid.
3 Latissimus dorsi.
[164]
THE TRUNK
TRUNK, back view
ANATOMY.
The trapezius is a diamond-shaped muscle with ;
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THE TRUNK
TRUNK, back view
S AND TllF.lR AIOVKMKXTS
[
1 68
THE TRUNK
THE CAGE OF THE TORSE
THE TRUNK
WEDGING OF THE CAGE INTO THE HIPS
172]
'
-ff V i i
The Pelvis
ANATOMY
Three bones make the pelvis: two innominate
(without a name) bones and one sacrum (sacrificial
bone).
The sacrum is a wedge about the size of the hand
but more perfectly shaped, bent like a half-bent
hand, and carrying a very small tip about as big as
the last joint of the thumb (coccyx). It forms the
central piece in the back, curving first back and
down and then down and in.
The two innominate bones are formed like two
propellers, with triangular blades twisted in oppo-
site directions.The rear corners of the top blades
meet the sacrum in the back, and the front corners
of the lower blades meet in front to form the sym-
physis pubis. The hip socket itself forms the central
point for the shaft. The two blades stand at right
[174]
isthe fulcrum for the lateral muscles and flares out
widely for that purpose rather more widely in front
;
than behind.
Above the rim is a roll of muscle belonging to the
abdominal wall immediately below it a groove or
:
The Hip
[175]
muscle is always prominent and changes its appear-
ance greatly in different positions of the hip, form-
ing a U-shaped wrinkle when the thigh is complete-
ly*flexed.
On the front end of the crest is a small knob,
from which descends the sartorius (tailor's) mus-
cle, longest in the body. It forms a graceful curve
as it the groove of the inner side of the thigh,
lies in
3 Rectus femoris.
4 Glutens medius.
5 Glutens maximus.
Tensor I
[1/6]
The Lower Limbs
ANATOMY
The lower limb is divided into three parts the
I 178 1
The Thigh
ANATOMY
From femur (trochanter) to the
the head of the
outside of the knee runs a band of tendon called the
ilio-tibial band. It makes a straight line from the
head of the thigh bone to the outside of the knee.
The rectus femoris muscle makes a slightly
bulging straight line from just below the iliac crest
to the knee cap.
On either side of the latter is a twin mass of
muscles. That of the outside (vastus externus)
makes one mass with it, and slightly overhangs the
ilio-tibial band outside. That of the inside vastus (
thigh.
Behind groove and adductors, around the back of
the thigh and to the ilio-tibial band outside, is the
mass of the ham-string muscles, whose tendons are
found on either side of the knee at the back. It is a
dual mass of muscle, dividing above the diamond-
shaped popliteal space at the back of the knee, whose
lower corner is formed by the gastrocnemius mus-
cle, similarly divided.
MASS
The mass of the thigh is inward from
inclined
[i79]
LOWER LIMBS
BONES OF THE LOWER LIMB:
Hip Pelvis.
Thigh Femur.
Leg Tibia and Fibula (outside).
2 Sartorius.
3 Rectus femoris.
4 Yastus externus.
5 Yastus interims.
C> Tibialis anticus.
7 Peroneus longus.
8 Extensor longus digitorum.
[182]
5
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LOWER LIMBS
MUSCI.KS OF THE LOWER LIMB, back view
1 Glutens medius.
2 Glutens maximus.
3 Semi-tendinosns.
4 Semi-membranosns.
5 Biceps femoris.
6 Gastrocnemins.
7 Soleus.
Glnteus medius |
184
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LOWER LIMBS
KNEE JOINT, back view
[
1 86
LOWER LIMBS
MUSCLES OF THE LOWER LIMB, outer view :
1 Glutens maximus.
2 Glutens mcdius.
3 Biceps femoris.
4 Vastus externus.
5 Gastrocnemius.
6 Peroneus longus.
7 Tibialis anticus.
1 88
\ \ "%'--"7
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LOWER LIMBS
MTSCLKS OF THE LOWER LIMB, inner view:
1 Rectus femoris.
2 Yastus internus.
3 Sartorius.
4 Gracilis.
5 Semi-tendinosus.
6 Semi-membranosus.
7 Gastrocnemins.
8 Soleus.
192
The Knee
*
I 196
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THE KNEE
KNEE:
1 Pad or sack.
2 Common tendon.
3 Patella or knee-pan.
[198]
THE KNEE
KNEE, inner view
200
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The Foot
202
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THE FOOT
THE FOOT, outer view
INTERLOCKING OF THE ANKLE WITH THE FOOT
204
THE FOOT
THE FOOT, inner view
206
V.T-..I ".J~. .
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TOES
THEIR PADS AND WEDGING
208
cS-iLs^
ORIGIN AND COMMON MEANING
OF ANATOMICAL WORDS
Flexor
Ulna Cubit
Radius Spoke (of wheel)
Carpal From carpus, wrist
Trapezium Table
Trapezoicl Like a table two sides parallel, two not
Scaphoid I
>oat-shaped
Semi-lunar Half-moon
Cuneiform Wedge-shaped
Pisiform Pea-shaped
Os magnum (ireat bone
Femur Thigh
Patella Little pan
Tibia Shin
Fibula Flute
Calcaneum From cal.r, heel
Tarsal Instep
Metatarsal Beyond the instep
Phalanges Ranks of soldiers
MUSCLES
Temporal Pertaining to temporal hone
Masseter Cbewer, masticator
Sterno-cleido- Attaching to sternum, clavicle and
mastoid mastoid bones
Thyroid Shield (and cidos, like) so shield-like.
;
[211]
Rectus abdominis Straight muscle of abdomen
Oblique Slanting
Serratus Sa\v-toothed
Teres Round
Biceps Two-headed
Brachialis Pertaining to arm
Anticus (Adjective) in front
Triceps Three-beaded
.Anconeus Donkey's foot
Coraco-hrachialis From eoracoid (beak-like) process of
scapula to bracbium, or arm
( iluleus Buttocks
Maximus ( ireatest
Medius Middle-sized
Minimus Smallest
Tensor Tightener, or holder
Fascia Band
l.ata Broad
Rectus femoris Straight muscle of the femur
Vastus externus <ireat muscle outside
Yastus inteinus ( ireat muscle inside-
212
Latissimus dorsi Rroadest muscle of hack
Infra-spinatus Below the spine ( of scapula )
213]
INDEX
Origin, Insertion and Action
of Muscles
[AI.I-:
Anconeus 82
Biceps Ann
IHceps Fenioris 184
Bracliialis anticus . .... 'i 8
Coraco-brachialis
Deltoid 104
Digastric 112
Gastrocnemius 188
(Iluteus niaximus IK!
(iluteus inedius IK!
Kcctus abdoniinis
Rectus femoris
Sartorius 182
Semi-tenclinosus 184
Semi-membranosus 1^4
Scrratus masnus 1"i2
I'-i
Sterno-liyoid 1
II-'
Stylo-liyoid
Soleus lii'i
Sterno-cleiclo-mastoideus 108
Supinator lon^us ^4
1<S
''
'] cnsor vajjiiKf fcinoris
Tercs major 104
Teres minor 104
Tibialis anticus 188
Trapezius 104
Triceps 104