Here is a camel metapodial
(also called a cannon bone) from the Late Miocene Dove Spring
Formation of the Ricardo Group, El Paso Mountain, Kern County,
California; in actual size, the specimen is 31 centimeters long
(slightly over a foot). Identified by Dr. Xiaoming Wang of the
Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County. According to Dr.
Robert Emory (National Museum Of Natural History, Smithsonian
Institution), who supplied some additional information, the specimen
is likely from the rear leg, so it is technically a metatarsal.
Dr. Emry says that the metatarsal is "formed of the fusion
of two metatarsals (same as in cattle, deer, etc). At the distal
end (toward the right in the image) it divides the separate ends
of the original two metatarsals, and the joint ends are broken
off--this is where the toe bones would articulate. This bone
is between the hock and the ground in ungulates--in you the metatarsals
are betweebn your ankle and your toes." |