“…Their compendia detailed reviews and cutting‐edge science exploring many aspects of the zygoma's growth, development, variation, and experimental manipulations in a range of species. This, the second‐part, delves into questions that relate to evolutionary and comparative aspects of the vertebrate skull, long a favored topic of our august journal (see, for example, many papers in Laitman ; Ross, ; Marquez, ; Dodson, ; Van Valkenburgh et al, ). Delving deeper into our archives, one will find: comments on the evolutionary/systematic importance of facial bones in the comparative, osteological study of rails and cranes by Shufeldt (); by the extraordinary, and often under‐appreciated osteologist, Bruno Oetteking in his insights on the evolution of the human zygoma (Oetteking, ); work by Allis () assessing ancestral homologies to the squamosal bone in fish; beautiful, and detailed, comparative anatomy of the facial musculature and zygomatic arch of the orang by Sullivan and Osgood (); and by Shanker, on the skulls of extant and fossil turtles, with insights on jugal evolution among these groups and reptiles in general (Shanker, ).…”