This volume, originally published in 1981, provides a comprehensive
account of the structure, development, evolution, functional adaptations
and growth of the skull of the placental mammals. A special feature, and
indeed principal purpose of the approach, is the integration of the
purely anatomical aspects of structure and development of the skull
largely worked out in the later years of the nineteenth and early years
of the twentieth century with the findings of modern investigations of
the evolution, function and postnatal growth of the skull. The
significance of further advances becomes more readily understandable
when seen against the background of comparative anatomy and embryology.
Professor Moore's fresh approach to his subject will be welcomed by
anatomists, embryologists, palaeontologists, comparative zoologists and
physical anthropologists.