Skull length is the measurement most commonly used as a standard against which other aspects of cranial morphology are compared to derive an index of relative size of proportions. Skull length is composed of 2 different functional components, facial skull and cerebral skull, which vary independently and have different scaling relationships with body size. An analysis of carnivore skull shape with measurements standardized against basicranium length produced very different results than an analysis using skull length as the standard. For example, expressions of relative size of cranial measurements were reduced by 13% in mustelids and increased by 20% in canids, reflecting removal of jaw length (short in mustelids and long in canids) from the comparative standard (basicranial axis length). Cranial measurements scale with higher allometric exponents against basicranial axis length than against skull length. [A representative sample of 62 spp. of modern carnivores, including viverrids, canids, mustelids and felids, was used.].