Page:The Zoologist, 3rd series, vol 1 (1877).djvu/492

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THE ZOOLOGIST.

I have never actually seen, or even heard of, a skeleton really made in this way, though ants, doubtless, especially in hot countries, will make short work of the flesh of an animal's body, leaving at least all the larger bones untouched. But we must adopt some safer and more universally applicable method of proceeding. Another common idea is that some "chemical" substance is necessary to steep them in for dissolving the soft parts, and I am often asked, "What acid do you use for this purpose?" when a little reflection would have shown that the bones would be the first parts to disappear under the influence of such a menstruum. No, water—pure water—is the only tiling required in preparing bones and skeletons in the great majority of cases, and in the proper use of the water the art of "macerating," as it is called, chiefly consists.

This process is nothing more or less than placing bones in water and leaving them undisturbed until putrefaction of all the flesh and blood remaining on and around them and within the hollows and small cavities of their interior, lakes place, and these soft parts entirely lose their form and structure and become converted into liquids and gases mingled with the water or escaped from its surface; so that when the bones are removed and well washed, nothing remains but the comparatively indestructible true osseous tissue, which, when dried, is hard, clean, and without smell.

Maceration consists, then, essentially in the destruction of the soft tissues by putrefaction, and certain circumstances are essential or favourable to the success of the process. In the first place, the water should not be too abundant in proportion to the amount of animal matter to be destroyed. Then it should never be changed or disturbed until the process is completed. The surface should be exposed to the air, and the loss from evaporation supplied from time to time. The temperature should be uniform and elevated. Cold checks the process; freezing arrests it altogether. If the heat is too great the bones are often greasy and discoloured, as when they are prepared by boiling. It is to the fact that the process varies in rapidity according to so many circumstances that the chief practical difficulty, which is to know when it is completed, is due. If the bones are taken out too soon, unless they are returned immediately to the same water, a check takes place in their preparation. To estimate the necessary time is a matter acquired only by practice and knowledge of the surrounding circumstances. Much will