UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA SAN FRANCISCO LIBRARY TEXT-BOOK OF THE EMBRYOLOGY OF MAN AND MAMMALS BY DR. OSCAR HERTWIG Professor extraordinarius of Anatomy and Comparative Anatomy, Director of the II. Anatomical Institute oj the University of Berlin TRANSLATED FROM THE THIRD GERMAN EDITION BY EDWARD L. MARK, Pn.D Hersey Professor of Anatomy in Harvard University 339 gigmts m tty fct aribr 2 'gifyagmglnc LONDON GEORGE ALLEN & CO., LTD. RUSKIN HOUSE 44, 45 RATHBONE PLACE 1912 several sub-groups. A. Simple Eggs. Simple eggs are such as are developed in an ovary out of a single germinal cell. The eggs of all the Vertebrates and most of the Invertebrates belong to this group. In this chief group there occur, according to the manner in which protoplasm and deutoplasm, are distributed within the egg, three modifications, which are of very great importance in the determination of the first processes of development. In the simplest case the deutoplasm, which ordinarily is present only to a limited amount in the correspondingly small egg, is more or less uniformly distributed in the protoplasm (fig. 1). In other cases there has arisen out of this original condition, in conjunction with an increase in the bulk of the yolk-material, an inequality in the distribution of the two egg-substances previously distinguished. The egg-plasma has accumulated in greater abundance at certain regions of the egg -territory, and the deutoplasma at other regions. Consequently, a contrast has arisen between portions of the egg-cell which are richer, and those which are poorer, in protoplasm. A further accentuation of this contrast exercises an extraordinarily broad and profound influence on the first processes of development, which take place in the egg after fertilisation. That is to say, the changes, which further on are embraced under the process of DESCRIPTION OF THE SEXUAL PRODUCTS. IT A.P cleavage, make their appearance only at the region of the egg which is richer in protoplasm, whereas the region which is more voluminous and richer in deutoplasm remains apparently quite unaltered, and is not divided up into cells. By this means the contrast, which was already present in the unsegmented egg, becomes during development disproportionately greater and more obvious. The one part undergoes changes, is divided into cells, and out of these produces the individual organs; the other part remains more or less unaltered, and is gradually employed as nutritive material. Following the example of KEICHERT, the part of the yolk which is richer in protoplasm, and to which the developmen- tal processes remain confined, has been designated formative yolk, and the other nutritive yolk. The unequal distribution of formative yolk (vitellus forma- tivus) and of nutritive yolk (vitellus nutritivus) within the egg is accomplished in two dif- ferent ways. In the one case (fig. 3) the formative yolk is accumulated at one pole of the egg as &jlat germ-disc (k.scli). Inasmuch as its specific gravity is less than that of the nutritive yolk (n.d) collected at the opposite pole, it is always directed upward, and it spreads itself out on the yolk just like a drop of oil on water. In this case, therefore, the egg has undergone a polar differentiation ; when at rest it must always assume a definite position, owing to the unequal weight of the two poles. The dissimilar poles are distin- guished : the upper, lighter pole, with the germ-disc, as the animal (A.P); the under, heavier and richer in yolk, as the vegetative pole (V.P). The polar differentiation of eggs is often encountered in Vertebrates, and is especially prominent in the classes of Bony Fishes, Eeptiles, and Birds. In the second case (fig. 4) the formative yolk (b.d) is accumulated over the whole surface of the egg, and surrounds the centrally placed nutritive yolk (n d) as a uniformly thick, finely granular cortical V.P Fig. 3. — Diagram of an egg with the nutritive- yolk in a polar position. The formative yolk constitutes at the animal pole ( A. P) a germ-disc (k.scli), in which the germinative vesicle (i'.fr) is enclosed. The nutritive yolk (n.d) fills the rest of the egg up to the vegetative pole (F.P). 12 EMBRYOLOGY. b.d n.d k.b Fig. 4.— Diagram of an egg with the nutri- tive yolk in the centre. The germi native vesicle (k.b) occupies the middle of the nutritive yolk (n.d), which is enveloped in a mantle of formative yolk (b.d). layer. The egg exhibits central differentiation, and therefore does not assume a constant position when at rest. As in the former case the yolk was polar in position, so here it is central. Such a condition is never encountered in Verte- brates, but it is characteristic of Arthropods. In order to distinguish the three modifications, BALFOUR has made use of the expressions alecithal, telolecithal, and centrolecithal. He calls those eggs alecithal in which the deutoplasm, in small amount, is uniformly distributed through the protoplasm ; telolecithal, those in which it is accumulated at the vegetative pole ; centrolecithal, those in which the accumulation of deutoplasm has taken place at the •centre. In what follows, we shall speak of (1) eggs with uniformly distributed yolk, (2) eggs with polar deutoplasm, and (3) eggs with •central deutoplasm. It is now expedient to illustrate what has just been said by typical •examples, and for this purpose the eggs of Mammals, Amphibia, Birds, and Arthropods have been selected. We shall also frequently recur to these in the presentation of the subsequent phases of develop- ment. The egg of Mammals and of Man is exceedingly small, since it mea- sures on the average only 0'2 mm. in diameter. It is for this reason that it was not discovered until the present century — in 1827, by CARL ERNST VON BAER. Previously the much larger GRAAFIAN follicle of the ovary, in which the smaller true egg is enclosed, had been erroneously taken for the latter. The Mammalian egg (fig. 5) con- sists principally of a finely granular protoplasmic substance, which contains dark, fat-like spherules and granules (deutoplasm), and which is turbid and opaque in proportion to the amount of these. The germinative vesicle (£.6) contains a large germinative dot (&./), located, together with a few smaller accessory dots, in a nuclear network (k.ri). The egg-membrane is called zona pelluc.ida (z.p), because it surrounds the yolk as a relatively thick and clear layer. It is a primary membrane, for it is formed within the GRAAFIAN follicle, by the follicular cells. Under high magnification the zona pellucida DESCRIPTION OF THE SEXUAL PRODt'CTS. Tig. 5.— Egg from a Rabbit's follicle which \vas 2 mm. in diameter, after WALDEYER. It i* surrounded by the zona pellucida 0-?>), on which there rest at one place follicular cells (/.z). The yolk contains deutoplasmic granules (gg, is exceedingly large, even visible to the naked eye^ and multi- nucleolar, inasmuch as there are a hundred or more large germinative °" vitelline membrane, the rupture of which is followed by an extrusion of the soft pulpy contents. By careful examination one will discover upon the latter a small white spot, the jgermina tive disc (jc.sch], or discus proligerus, also called scar <>r cicairicula. It has a diameter of about 3 or 4 mm., and consists •of formative yolk,— -a finely granular protoplasm with small yolk- •spherules, — whiciralone is involved in the process of cleavage. In the flattened germinative disc is also found the germinative vesicle, fig. 6a (k. b) and fig. 6b (x), which is likewise somewhat flattened and lenticular. The remaining chief mass of the egg-cell is nutritive yolk., which is composed of numberless yolk-spherules united by slight traces of egg- plasm, as though by a cement. Information concerning its finer structure is to be gained from thin sections through the hardened egg, which should be cut perpendicularly to the germinative disc. According to differences in staining and in elementary composition, there are now to be distinguished the white and the yellow nutritive yolk (fig. 6a). The white yolk (w.d) is present in the egg- cell only in a small 16 EMBRYOLOGY. quantity ; it forms a thin layer over the whole surface, the white- yolk-rind ; secondly, it is accumulated in somewhat greater quantity under the germinative vesicle, for which it at the same time forms a. bed or cushion (PANDER'S nucleus) ; and, thirdly, from this region it Fig. 6b.— Section of the germ-disc of a mature ovarian Hen's egg still enclosed in the capsule, after BALFOUR. n, Connective-tissue capsule of the egg ; 6, epithelium of the capsule, on the inside of which lies the vitelline membrane reposing upon the egg ; c, granular substance of the germinative disc ; w.y, white yolk, which passes imperceptibly into the finely granular substance of the disc ; a-, germinative vesicle enclosed in a distinct membrane, but shrivelled up : .". space originally occupied by the germinative vesicle, but ma-le empty by its shrivelling up. penetrates in the form of a mortar-pestle into the very centre of the- yellow yolk, where it terminates in a knob-like swelling (latebra., PURKINJE). Upon boiling the egg, it is less coagulated, and remains- softer than the yellow yolk. In the coagulated condition the latter discloses upon sections a lamellated condition, in that it consists of smaller and larger spherical shells, which envelope the latebra. The two kinds of yolk also differ from each other in respect to* the condition of their elementary particles. The yellow yolk consists of soft plastic spherules (fig. 7 A) from 25 to 100 /u, in diameter, which acquire a punctate appearance from the presence of numerous exceedingly minute granules. The elements of the white yolk are for the most part smaller (fig. 7 B), and likewise spherical, but contain one or several large highly refractive granules*. Tig. 7.— Yolk-elements from the Fowl's egg, after BAI.FOUR. A, Yellow yolk ; B, white ydk. At the boundary Iw-twiui the two kinds of yolk there are present spherules which < flfi ct a transition between them. The freshly laid Hen's egg (fig. 8) has a different appi aram-e from that of such an ovarian egg. This results from the fact iliat there is deposit rd around th<-> volk, when it detaches itself from DESCRIPTION OF THE SEXUAL PRODUCTS. 17 the ovary and is taken up by the oviduct, several secondary en- velopes derive d from the wall of the oviduct, viz., the white of the egg, or the albumen, the shell-membrane, and the calcareous shell. Each of these parts is formed in a special region of the Hen's oviduct. The latter is divided into four regions : (1) A narrow ciliated initial part, into which the liberated egg is received, and where it is fertilised by the spermatozoa already accumulated there ; (2) a ct.Z. Fig. 8. — Diagrammatic longitudinal section of an unincubated Hen's egg. after ALIEN Tn MSOM. (Somewhat altered.) b.L. Germ-disc ; w.y. white yolk, which consists of a central flask-shaped mass and a number of concentric layers surrounding the yellow yolk (y.y.) \ v.t. vitelline membrane ; x. a somewhat fluid albuminous layer, which immediately envelopes the yolk ; w. albumen composed of alternating layers of more and less fluid portions ; ch.l. chalazae ; a.cA. air chamber at the blunt end of the egg — simply a space between the two layers of the shell-membrane ; t.j.m. inner, s.m. outer layer of the shell-membrane ; 5. shell. glandular region, covered with longitudinal furrows, from which the albumen is secreted, and spread around the yolk in a thick layer ; (3) a somewhat enlarged part, covered with small villi, the cells of which secrete calcareous salts, and thus cause the formation of the shell ; (4) a short narrower region, through which the egg passes rapidly, and without undergoing any further change, when being deposited. The envelopes furnished in succession by the oviduct have the following composition : — The white of the egg, or albumen (w), is a mixture of several materials: according to clieini al analyses, it contains 12% albumen, 2 18 EMBRYOLOGY. 1-5% fat and other extractive materials, 0'5% salts (potassic chloride, sodic chloride, sulphates, and phosphates), and 86% water. It surrounds the yolk in several layers of varying consistency. There is a layer quite closely investing the latter, which is firmer and especially noteworthy because it is prolonged into two peculiar spirally twisted cords, the chalazce (ch.l), which consist of a very compact albuminous substance, and which make their way through the albumen to the blunt and to the pointed poles of the egg The albumen is enclosed by the thin but firm shell-membrane (s.m) (membrana testae), which is composed of felted fibres. It may be separated into two lamellae — an outer, which is thicker and firmer, and an inner, which is thinner and smooth. Soon after the egg is laid the two layers separate from each other at the blunt pole, and enclose between them a space filled with air (a.ch), — the so-called air-chamber, which continues to increase in size during incubation, and is of importance for the respiration of the developing Chick. Finally, the shell, or testa (a), is in close contact with the shell- membrane; it consists of an organic matrix (2%), in which 98% cal- careous salts are deposited. It is porous, being traversed by small canals, through which the atmospheric air may gain entrance to the egg. The porosity of the calcareous shell is an absolute necessity for the normal development of the egg, since the vital processes in the protoplasm can take place only when there is a constant supply of oxygen. If the porosity of the shell be destroyed, either by soaking it in oil or closing its pores with varnish, the death of the incubated egg ensues in a very short time. B. Compound Eggs. Compound eggs are found only in a few subdivisions of the invertebrated animals, as in the Cestodes, Trematodes, etc. ; they are noteworthy in this respect, that they are produced by the union of numerous cells, which are formed in two different glands of the sexual apparatus of the female, — in the germarium and in the vitellarium. In the germarium is developed the egg-cell in the restricted sense. This is always very small, and consists almost exclusively of egg-plasm. When this cell at its maturity is set free from its surroundings and cornea into the sexual outlets, it is obliged to pass the opening of the vitellarium ; here there are associated with it a number of yolk-cells, which, owing to deposition of reserve material in the protoplasm, appear turbid and coarsely granular, DESCRIPTION OF THE SEXUAL PRODUCTS. 19 and which constitute the dower that is given by the maternal organism to the developing germ on its way. Thereupon the whole is enclosed in one or several secondary egg-membranes, and now constitutes the compound egg, in which, however, the developmental processes manifest themselves exclusively on the simple germ cell ; it is that alone which is fertilised and segments, while the yolk-cells gradually degenerate and are employed as nutritive material. Thus in this case also, upon closer examination, the general law, that the descendent organism takes its origin from a single cell of the maternal body, suffers no exception. 2, The Seminal Filaments. In contrast with eggs, which are the largest cells of the animal body, the sperm-cells or sperm-filaments (spermatozoa) are the smallest elementary parts ; they are accumulated in great multitudes in the seminal fluid of the male, but can be recog- nised in it only by the aid of high magnification, being, for the most part, slender motile filaments. & A— * Inasmuch as every cell consists of at least two parts, namely, nucleus and protoplasm, we must look for these parts in this case also. We shall take for description the spermatozoa of Man. In Man the seminal filaments (fig. 9) are about 0'05 mm. long. One may distinguish as head (k) a short but thick region, which marks the anterior end, as tail a long thread-like appendage (s), and F^' 9-— Mature sper- matozoa of Man, between the two a so-called middle piece (m). seen in two dif- The head (k) has the form of an oval plate, £ref P08itions- -x ' v Each consists of a which is slightly excavated on botl> surfaces, head (/fc), a mia- and is somewhat thinner toward the anterior end. ^ jjce ()ii)' and Seen from the side (£) it presents a certain re- semblance to a flattened pear. Chemically considered, it consists of nuclear substance (nuclein or chromatin), as microchemical reactions show. To the head is united, by means of a short part called the middle piece (m), the long thread-like appendage (a), which is com- posed of protoplasm, and is best compared to a flagellum, because, like the latter, it executes peculiar serpentine motions in virtue of its contractile properties. By means of these motions the sper- matozoon moves forwards in the seminal fluid with considerable velocity. 20 EMBRYOLOGY. The spermatozoa have often been designated — and it seems to us with entire justice — as ciliate, or still better as flagellate, cells. The spermatozoa of the remaining Vertebrates have a similar structure to that of Man ; on the whole, the diversity of form which is encountered in the comparative study of the egg-cell in the animal kingdom is wanting here. That spermatozoa are in reality metamorphosed cells cannot be more clearly demonstrated than by their development. According to the extended observations of LA VALETTE and others, each spermatozoon is formed from a single seminal cell or spei matid, and, to be more precise, the head w formed from the nucleus, the contractile filament from the protoplasm,. The metamorphoses which take place in the development have been investigated with the greatest detail by FLEMMING and HERMANN in the case of Salamandra maculata, the spermatozoa of which are characterised by their very great size. The individual spermatozoon here consists of: (1) a very long head, which has the form of a finely pointed skewer, and takes up stains with avidity ; (2) a short cylindrical middle piece, which differs from the first part in chemical properties also ; (3) the motile caudal filament, which in the Salamander exhibits the additional peculiarity that it is provided with a contractile undulating membrane. Of these three regions the skewer-like head, and probably also the middle piece, arise from the nucleus of the spermatid, whereas the contractile filament is differentiated out of the protoplasm. In the development of the- head the nucleus of the seminal cell is seen to become more and nore elongated (fig. 10 A, B); at first it takes the form of a pear \fig. 10 A k) ; then it grows out into an elongated cone (fig. 10 B A;), the base of which serves as the point of attachment for the middle piece (mst). The cone becomes elongated and narrowed into a rod (fig. 11-4, £), which is finally converted into the characteristic form of a skewer. With this elongation of the nucleus the chromatic network becomes more and more dense, and at last assumes a quite- compact and homogeneous condition, as in the mature spermatozoon. The fundament (Anlage) of the middle piece (figs. 10, 11, A, B, mst} makes its appearance early — when the nucleus begins to elongate — at that end of the nucleus which was called its base, in the form of a small oval body, which at first takes up stains like the head, but afterwards loses this proper' ty. Its first appearance demands still further elucidation. DESCRIPTION OF THE SEXUAL PRODUCTS. 21 Why are the male sexual cells so small and thread-like, and so y WEISMANN and by BLOCHMANN, that in eggs which are developed parthenogenetically only a single polar cell arises. ]f the original obscurity on the morphological side, in which the phenomena MATURATION OF THE EGG, AND PROCESS OF FERTILISATION. 37 of the maturation of the egg were enveloped, has been in general cleared up, the same is not the case if we inquire after its physiological meaning. That the germinative vesicle undergoes a regressive metamorphosis into component parts is easily comprehensible, for a firm membrane and a rich accumulation of nucleoplasm certainly cannot be necessary to the interaction of protoplasm and active nuclear substance in the processes of division. Its dissolution is, as it were, the preliminary requirement for the renewed activity of the nuclear contents. But what function shall one ascribe to the polar cells? Concerning this several hypotheses have been proposed. BALFOUR, SEDGWICK MINOT, VAX BENEDEN, and others, are of opinion that the immature egg, like every other cell, is originally hermaphroditic, and that by the development of polar cells it rids itself of the male constituents of its nucleus, which afterwards are replaced by fertilisation. BALFOUR thinks that, if no polar cells were formed, parthenogenesis must normally occur. WEISMANN, supported by his discovery in the case of eggs developing parthenogenetically (p. 34), ascribes a different function to the first and tLe second polar cells. He distinguishes in the germinative vesicle two different kinds of plasma, which he designates ovogenetic and germinal plasma. He maintains that by the formation of the first polar cell the ovogenetic plasma is eliminated from the ovum ; by that of the second polar cell, half of the germinal plasma. In the latter case the ejected germinal plasma must bo replaced by fertilisation. These hypotheses appear to me upon closer examination to present many vulnerable points. To me appears more promising an interpretation of BUTSCHLI, who compares the egg, as had already often been done, to the mother-cell of spermatozoa. Just as the latter gives rise to many spermatozoa, so also the egg must have once possessed the capability of dividing itself into many eggs. In the formation of the polar cells, which are eggs that have become rudimentary, as it were, there has been preserved a trace of these origiual conditions. Also BOVERI regards the polar cells as abortive eggs. I have likewise always conceived of the conditions in this manner. 2. The Process of Fertilisation. The union of egg-cell and spermatic cell is designated as the process of fertilisation. This process is to be observed, sometimes with great difficulty, sometimes with considerable ease, according to the choice of the animal for experimentation. The investigator ordinarily en- counters great difficulties in cases where the ripe eggs are not laid, but where a part, if not the whole, of their development is effected within the sexual ducts of the maternal organism. In such cases the fertili- sation also must evidently take place in the ducts of the female sexual apparatus, into which the semen is introduced in the act of copulation. An internal fertilisation takes place in nearly all Vertebrates except the greater part of the Fishes and many Amphibia. Usually the egg and the spermatozoa meet, in the case of Man and Mammals, in 38 EMBRYOLOGY. 1he beginning of the oviduct ; likewise in the case of Birds they meet in the first of the four regions previously (p. 17) distinguished, and at a time when the yolk is not yet surrounded with its albuminous envelope and calcareous shell. In contrast to internal fertilisation stands external fertilisation, which is the simpler and more primitive method, and which occurs in the case of many Invertebrates that live in the water, as well as ordinarily in Fishes and Amphibia. In this method, while male and female keep near together, both kinds of sexual products, which are for the most part produced in great number, are evacuated directly into the water, where fertilisation takes place outside of the maternal Fig. 17 A, B, C.— Small portions of eggs of Asterias glacialis, after FOL. The spermatozoa have already penetrated into the gelatinous envelope which covers the eggs. In A there begins to be raised up a protuberanc-j toward the most advanced spermatozoon. In B the protuberance and spermatozoon have met. In C the spermatozoon has penetrated into the egg. A vitelline membrane, with a crater-like orifice, has now been distinctly formed. organism. The whole procedure is therefore much more easily observ- able. The experimenter has it within his power to effect fertilisation artificially, and thus to determine precisely the point of time at which egg and semen are to meet. He needs only to collect in a watch-glass containing water ripe eggs from a female, likewise in a second watch- glass ripe semen from a male, and then to mingle the two in a suitable manner. In this way artificial fertilisation is extensively practised in fish-breeding. For the purpose of scientific investigation the selection of the particular species of animal is of the greatest importance. It is manifest that animals with large opaque eggs do not commend themselves, whereas those species are especially suit- able whose eggs are so small and transparent that one can observe them under the microscope with the highest powers, and at the same time pass in review every least speck. Many species of Echinoderms MATURATION OF THE EGG, AND PROCESS OF FERTILISATION. 39 are in this respect most excellent objects for investigation. Conse- quently it was by means of them that an accurate insight into the processes of fertilisation was first secured. They may therefore serve in the following account as the foundation of our description. If ripe eggs with egg-nucleus are removed from the ovary into a watch-glass containing sea -water, and a small quantity of seminal fluid is added, a very uniform result is obtained, since in the course of five minutes every one of many hundreds or thousands of eggs is normally fertilised, as can be accurately observed by means of high magnification. Although spermatozoa attach themselves to the gelatinous envelope Fig. 18. Fig. 19. Fig. 18. -Fertilised egg of a Sea-urchin. The head of the spermatozoon which penetrated has been converted into a sperm-nucleus (s/t) surrounded by a protoplasmic radiation, and has approached the egg-nucleus (ek). Fig. 19.— Fertilised egg of a Sea-urchin. The sperm-nucleus (sk) and the egg-nucleus (ek) have come close to each other, and both are surrounded by a protoplasmic radiation. of an egg in great numbers, — many thousands of them when con- centrated seminal fluid is employed, — still only a single one of them is concerned in fertilisation, and that is the one which by the lash- like motion of its filament first approached the egg. Where it strikes the surface of the egg with the point of its head the clear superficial expanse of the egg-protoplasm is at once elevated into a small knob that is often drawn out to a fine point, the so-called receptive promin- ence (Empfdngnisshiigel), or cone of attraction. At this place the seminal filament, with pendulous motions of its caudal appendage, bores its way into the egg (fig. 17 A, B). At the same time a fine membrane (fig. 71 C) detaches itself from the yolk over the whole surface, beginning at the cone, and becomes separated iiom it by an ever-increasing space. The space probably arises because, in consequence of fertilisation, the egg-plasma contracts and presses 40 EMBRYOLOGY. out fluid (probably the nuclear fluid which was diffused after the disappearance of the germinative vesicle). The formation of a vitelline membrane is in so far of great signi- ficance for the fertilisation, as it makes the penetration of another male element impossible. No one of the other spermatozoa swing- ing to and fro in the gelatinous envelope is able after that to get into the fertilised egg. The one which has penetrated thereupon undergoes a series of changes. The contractile filament ceases to vibrate, and soon dis- appears ; but out of the head — which, as was previously stated, i& derived from the nucleus of a sperm-cell (spermatid), and consists of nuclein — there is soon developed a very small spheroidal or oval corpuscle, which afterwards becomes somewhat larger, the semen- or sperm -nucleus (fig. 18 ak). This slowly moves deeper into the yolk, whereupon it exerts an influence upon the surrounding protoplasm. For the latter is arranged radially around the sperm -nucleus (sk), so that there is formed a radiate figure, which is at first small, but afterwards becomes more and more sharply expressed and more ex- tended. Now an interesting phenomenon begins to hold the attention of the observer (figs. 18, 19, 20). Egg- nucleus and sperm-nucleus mutually attract each other, as it were, and migrate through the yolk toward each other with increasing velocity. The sperm-nucleus (sk), enveloped in its protoplasmic radia- tion, changes place more rapidly than the egg-nucleus (ek). Soon the two meet, either in, or at least near, the middle of the egg (fig. 19) ; become surrounded by a common radiation, which now extends through the whole yolk-substance; are firmly juxtaposed, and then mutually flattened at the surface of contact ; and finally fuse with each other (fig. 20 fk). The product of their fusion is the first cleavage-nucleus (fk\ which undergoes the further alterations leading to cell -division. This whole interesting process of fertilisation has consumed in the present object of investigation the short time of about ten minutes only. The phenomena of fertilisation discovered in the Echinoderms were Fig. 20. — Egg of a Sea-urchin immediately after the close of fertilisation. Egg-nucleus and sperm-nucleus are fused to form the cleavage-nucleus (fk), which occupies the centre of a protoplasmic radiation. MATURATION OF THE EGG, AND PROCESS OF FERTILISATION. 41 soon observed, either completely or at least partially, in numerous other animals also — in Ccelenterates and Worms (NUSSBAUM, VAN BENEDEN, CARNOY, ZACHARIAS, BOVERI, PLAINER), and in Molluscs and Verte- brates. As regards the last, it has been possible to follow accurately in the case of Petromyzon the penetration of a single spermatozoon into the egg through a special preformed micropyle in the vitelline membrane (CALBERLA, KUPFFER, BENECKE, and BO'BM). Likewise in the Amphibia, proof has been brought forward that after fertilisation a sperm-nucleus is formed at the animal pole, and that, surrounded by a pigmented area, derived from the cortex of the yolk, it moves to- ward another more deeply imbedded nucleus (egg-nucleus), and fuses with it (0. HERTWIG, BAMBEKE, BORN). In Mammals the fertilisa- tion takes place in the beginning of the oviduct. Evidence has also been produced in their case that after the liberation of the polar cells two nuclei are temporarily to be seen in the egg-cells, and that, these unite in the centre of the egg to form the cleavage-nucleus (VAN BENEDEN, TAFANI). This is the proper place in which to mention briefly the so-callecl micropyle. In many animals (Arthropods, Fishes, etc.) the eggs are enclosed before they are fertilised in a thick firm envelope, which is impenetrable for spermatozoa. Now, in order to make fertilisation possible, there are found in these cases at a definite place on the egg- membrane sometimes one, sometimes several, small openings (micro- pyles), at which the spermatozoa accumulate in order to glide into the interior of the egg. The egg of Nematodes has for several years rightly played an important role in the literature of the process of fertilisation. But this is especially true for the egg of the Maw-worm of the Horse (Ascaris megalocephala), which VAN BENEDEN has made the subject of a celebrated monograph. It is an excellent object, in so far as it not only can be had for study everywhere and at all seasons of the year, but also allows one to follow step by step, in the most accurate manner, the penetration and subsequent fate of the sper- matozoon. Since, moreover, the process of fertilisation in Ascaris megalocephala presents many peculiarities in its details, an extended presentation of them is both warranted and desirable. In the case of this Worm, in which the sexes are separate individuals, there is a copulation, and the fertilisation of the egg takes place within the sexual passages of the female. In one region, which is expanded into a kind of uterus, mature spermatic bodies are met with in great numbers. The appearance of these differs greatly from that which 42 EMBRYOLOGY. the male seminal elements ordinarily present in the animal kingdom: for they are apparently motionless ; are comparable in form to a cone, a conical ball, cr a thimble (fig. 21) ; and consist in part of a granular substance (b), in part of a homogeneous lustrous substance (/), and of a small spherical body of nuclear substance (/£), which is imbedded in the granular substance at the base of the cone. When the small naked eggs enter into the region designated as uterus, fertilisation takes place at once. One spermatic body, which can execute feeble amoeboid motions with its basal end (SCHNEIDER), attaches itself to the surface of the yolk (fig. 22 sk). Where contact with the egg first takes place, there is formed, exactly as in the Echinoderms, a special cone of attraction. Here the spermatic body, without essential change of form, gradually glides deeper into the yolk, until it is completely enclosed therein (fig. 23). While the two sexual products are thus externally fused, the egg itself is not yet ripe, because it still Fig. 21.— Spermatic possesses the germinative vesicle (fig. 22 kb), but body of Ascaris , megalocephaia, " novv promptly begins to enter upon the matura- after VAN BENE- tion stage by preparing to form the polar cells. k, Nucleus ; 6, base The germinative vesicle, which is of small size in of the cone by the case of the Maw-worm of the Horse, loses its which the attach ment to the egg sharp delimitation from the yolk, moves toward takes place; /, ^hat surface of the egg which is opposite to the lustrous substance . x x resembling fat. cone of attraction (figs. 23, 24), and is gradually converted into a nuclear spindle (sp), the origin of which may be traced upon this object with considerable precision. The most important part of the process consists in the formation, out of the chromatic substance, of numerous short, rod-like pieces (figs. 23, 24, ch), which form directly the chromatic elements of the spindle, the chromosomes (WALDEYER). As in the case of the Echinoderms, there then arise at the surface of the yolk two small polar cells (fig. 25 pz) ; as in that case, a vesicular egg nucleus (fig. 25 ei) arises from the half of the second polar spindle which remains in the peripheral portion of the yolk. Meanwhile the spermatic body has moved farther and farther from the place of its entrance into the egg (figs. 22, 23, sk), and finally comes to lie in the middle of the yolk (fig. 24 sk), approxi- mately in the position occupied by the germinative vesicle before its migration to the surface. During this period the spermatic body has gradually lost its original form and its sharp delimitation ; out MATURATION OF THE EGG, AND PROCESS OF FERTILISATION. 43 of its nuclear substance, which was described as a small, deeply stainalle spherule, there arises a vesicular nucleus (fig. 25 sk), which acquires the same size and condition as the egg-nucleus. Fig. 22. Fig. 23. Fig. 22.— An egg of Ascaris msgalocephala just fertilised, after VAX BEXEDEX. xk, Spermatic body, with nucleus, which has entered the egg ; /, fat-like substance of the spermatic body ; kb, germinative vesicle. Fig. 23.— A stage of a fertilised egg of Ascaris megalocephala, somewhat older than that of fig. 22, after VAX BEXEDEN. s',-, Spermatic body, which has penetrated deeper into the cortex of the yolk ; sp, polar spindle which has arisen from the germinative vesicle ; ch, chromosomes of the spindle. After the rapid and continuous accomplishment of these processes, the egg of the Worm usually enters on a longer or shorter period of Fig. 24. Fig. 25. Fig. 24. —A still older stage of development, following that of fig. 23, of the egg of Ascaris megalocephala, after BOVKRI. tp, Polar spindle, which has ascended to the surface of the yolk ; ch, 2x4 chromosomes ; sk, spermatic nucleus, which has migrated into the middle of the egg. Fig. 25.— Egg of Ascaris msgalocephala in preparation for the process of cleavage, after E. VAN BEXEDEX. 2)z, Two polar cells which have arisen from the polar spindle 0/>) of fig. 24 by a repetition of the pi-ocess of budding ; ei, egg-nucleus ; sk, spermatic nucleus already preparing to divide ; ch, nuclear loops or chromosomes. rest. It now presents (compare fig. 25, which represents a stage already further developed) at its surface within the vitelline mem- brane two polar cells (pz), and in its interior two large vesicular nuclei, the spermatic nucleus (sk) and the egg-nucleus (ei), the 44 EMBRYOLOGY latter of which has come close up to the former, without, however, fusing with it. A union of the male and female nuclear substances into a common nuclear figure takes place in the case of the Maw- worm, when the process of egg-cleavage is beginning. The processes of fertilisation just described can be designated as typical for the animal kingdom. But they appear to recur in exactly the same manner throughout the vegetable kingdom also, as has- been shown by the thorough investigations of STRASBURGER. We are therefore in a better position now than formerly to advance a. theory of fertilisation based upon an important array of facts : — In fertilisation clearly demonstrable morphological processes take place. Of these the important and essential one is the union of two cell-nuclei which have arisen from different sexual cells, a female egg- nucleus and a male spermatic nucleus. These contain the fructifying nuclear substance, which is an organised body and comes into activity as such in fertilisation. Recently the attempt has been made to expand the fertilisation theory into a theory of transmission. Important reasons may be urged, as appearing to indicate that the fructifying substance is at ih& same time the bearer of the transmissible peculiarities. The female- nuclear substance transmits the peculiarities of the mother, the male- nuclear substance the peculiarities of the father, to the nascent creature. Perhaps there is in this theory a morphological basis for the fact that offspring resemble both progenitors, and in general inherit from both equally numerous peculiarities. If we accept these two theories, the nucleus, which, despite its constant presence, previously had to be described as a problematic structure of unknown significance, acquires an important role in the life of the cell. It seems to be the cell's especial organ of fertilisation and transmission, inasmuch as there is stored within it a substance (idioplasma of NAGELI) which is less subject to cell metastasis. In connection with the consideration of the process of fertilisation may be permitted a slight digression to the realm of pathological phenomena. As follows from numerous observations in both the animal and vegetable kingdoms, in the normal course of fecundation only a single spermatic filament penetrates into an e(jg, when the encountering sexual cells are entirely healthy. But with an impaired condition of the egg-cell, superfetation by means of two or more seminal filaments (polyspermia) takes place. Superfetation may be produced artificially, if by way of experiment MATURATION OF THE EGG, AND PROCESS OF FERTILISATION. 45 one injures the egg-cell. This may be accomplished either by exposing it temporarily to a lower or a higher temperature, and thus producing cold-rigor or heat-rigor, or by affecting it with chemical reagents, — chloroforming it, or treating it with morphine, strychnine, nicotine, quinine, etc., — or by doing violence to it in a mechanical way, such as shaking it. It is interesting to observe how, with all of these means, the degree of superfetation is, to a certain extent, proportional to the degree of the injury ; how, for example, a small number of spermatozoa penetrate into eggs which have been slightly affected with chloral, whereas a greater number penetrate those which have been more strongly narcotised. In all unfertilised eggs the whole course of development becomes abnormal. But whether, as claimed in FOL'S hypothesis, the origin of double and of multiple organisms is referable respectively to the penetration of two and many spermatozoa, must still be regarded as doubtful. Certainly the question suggested richly deserves to be still more thoroughly tested experimentally. HISTORY. — The facts here given concerning the theory of fecundation are acquisitions of very recent times. To omit the older hypotheses, it was generally assumed up to the year 1875 that the spermatozoa penetrate in great numbers into the substance of the egg, but that they there lose their activity and become dissolved in the yolk. I succeeded in my study of the eggs of Toxopneustes lividus in rinding an object in which all the internal phenomena of fertilisation may be determined with ease and certainty, and in establishing (1) that inconsequence of fertilisation the head of a spermatic filament surrounded by a stellate figure makes its appearance in the cortex of the yolk, and is metamorphosed into a small corpuscle, which I called spermatic nucleus : (2) that within ten minutes egg-nucleus and spermatic nucleus copulate ; (3) that normally fertilisation is accomplished by only a sinf/le spermatic filament, whereas in pathologically altered eggs several spermatozoa may penetrate. I was therefore able at that time to announce the proposition, that fertilisation depends upon the fusion of two sexually differentiated cell-nuclei. A few months later, VAN BENEDEN announced that in the case of Mammals the segmentation-nucleus arises from the fusion of two nuclei, — as had previously been observed by AUERBACHand BUTSCHLI in the case of numerous other objects, — and expressed the conjecture that one of them, which has at first a peripheral position, might in part result from the substance of the spermatozoa, which, in great numbers, as he maintained, fuse and become commingled with the cortical portion of the yolk. An advance was soon after this made by FOL, who investigated with the greatest detail the eggs of Echinoderms at the very moment of the penetration of a spermatic filament into the egg, and discovered the formation of a cone of attraction. Since then it has been established by means of numerous researches (those of SELENKA, FOL, HERTWIG, CALBERLA, KUPFFER, NUSSBAUM, VAN BENEDEN, EBERTH, FLEMMING, ZACHARIAS, BOVERI, PLATNER, TAFANI, BOHM, ana 46 EMBRYOLOGY. others) that in other objects also, and in other branches of the animal kingdom, the processes of fertilisation take place in essentially the same manner. At the same time the comprehension of the processes of fertilisation was essentially advanced, especially by the works of VAN BENEDEN on the egg of Ascaris megalocephala, to which have been added the important investiga- tions of BOVERI and others on the same object. STRASBURGER has established in a series of excellent researches the identity of the processes of fertilisation in the animal and vegetable kingdoms. Finally, the phenomena of fertilisation were utilised simultaneously by STRASBURGER and myself for the foundation of a theory of heredity, in our endeavor to prove — what others (KEBER, HAECKEL, HASSE) had previously expressed as a conjecture — that the male and the female nuclear substances are the bearers of the peculiarities which are transmitted from parent to offspring. KOLLIKER, Eoux, BAMBEKE, WEISMANN, VAN BENEDEN, BOVERI, and others have since expressed themselves in a similar manner. SUMMARY. 1. At maturation the germinative vesicle gradually rises to the animal pole of the egg, and thereby undergoes a regressive meta- morphosis (degeneration of the nuclear membrane and the fibrous network, mingling of the nuclear fluid — Kernsaft — with the proto- plasm). 2. A nuclear spindle (polar spindle or direction-spindle) is de- veloped out of remnants of the germinative vesicle, principally, indeed, out of the substance of the germinative dot, which breaks up into chromosomes. 3. At the place where the spindle encounters the surface of the yolk with one of its ends, there are formed two polar cells or direction- bodies (Richtunyskorper) by means of a process of budding, which is repeated. 4. At the second budding, half of the nuclear spindle remains in the cortex of the yolk, and is metamorphosed into the egg-nucleus. The egg is then ripe. 5. In the case of eggs which develop parthenogenetically (Arthro- poda), ordinarily only one polar cell is formed. 6. At fertilisation only a single spermatozoon penetrates a sound egg (formation of a cone $ attraction, detachment of a vitelline mem- biane). 7. The head of the spermatozoon is converted into the spermatic nucleus, around which the neighbouring protoplasmic particles are radially arranged. 8. Egg-nucleus and spermatic nucleus migrate toward each other, and in mcst instances immediately fuse to form the segmentation- LITERATURE. 47 nucleus ; in many objects they remain for a considerable time near each other, but not united, and only later are together metamorphosed into the segmentation-spindle. 9. In some animals fertilisation of the egg takes place only after completion of its maturation, but in others it is inaugurated at the very beginning of maturation, so that the two phenomena overlap each other. 10. Fertilisation theory. Fertilisation depends on the copulation of two cell-nuclei, which are derived from a male cell and a female cell. 11. Theory of heredity. The male and female nuclear substances contained in the spermatic nucleus and the egg-nucleus are the bearers of the peculiaiities which are transmissible from parents to their offspring. LITERATURE. Agassiz and. Whitman. The Development of Osseous Fishes. II. The pre-embryonic Stages of Development. Pfc. 2. The History of the Egg from Fertilization to Cleavage. Mem. Museum Comp. Zoology at Harvard College. Vol. XIV. No. I. Part II. 1889. Balfour. On the Phenomena accompanying the Maturation and Im- pregnation of the Ovum. Quart. Jour. Micr. Sci. Vol. XVIII. 1878, p. 1C9. Bambeke. Eecherches sur 1'Embryologie des Batraciens. Bull, de 1'Acad. roy. Sci. cle Belgique. 2me ser. T. LXI. 1876. Beneden., Ed. van, et Charles Julin. Observations sur la maturation, la fecondation et la segmentation de 1'oeuf chez les cheiropteres. Archives de Biologic. T. I. 1880, p. 551. Beneden, E. van. La maturation de 1'oeuf, la fecondation, etc., des mammi- feres. Bull, de 1'Acad. roy. Sci. de Belgique. 2me ser. T. XL. Nr. 12. 1875. Beneden, E. van. Contributions a 1'histoire de la vesicule germinative, etc Bull, de 1'Acad. roy. Sci. de Belgique. 2me ser. T. XLI. Nr. 1. 1876. Beneden, E. van. Eecherches sur la maturation de 1'oeuf, la fecondation et la division cellulaire. Archives de Biologic. T. IV. Paris ] 883. .Beneden, van, et Neyt. Nouvelles recherches sur la fecondation et la division mitosique chez 1'Ascaride megalocephale. Leipzig 1887. And Bull, de 1'Acad. roy. Sci. de Belgique. 3me ser. T. XIV. p. 215. Blochmann. Ueber die Eichtungskorper bei clen Insecteueiern. Biol. Gen- tralblatt. Bd. VII. 1887. Blochmann. Ueber die Eichtungskorper bei Insecteneiern. Morphol. Jahrb Bd. XII. 1887, p. 544. Blochmann. Ueber die Reifung der Eier bei Ameisen und Wespen. Fest- schrift zur Feier des SOOjiihr. Bestehens der Univ. Heidelberg. 13SG. Med. Theil. 48 EMBRYOLOGY. Blochmann. Ueber die Zahl der Richtungskdrper bei befruchteten un: unbefruchteten Bieneneiern. Morpholog. Jahrb. Bd. XV. 1889. Bbhm, A. Ueber Reifung und Befruchtung des Eies von Petromyzon. Archiv. f. mikr. Anat. Bd. XXXII. 1888, p. 613. Born. Ueber den Einfluss der Schwere auf das Froschei. Archiv f. niikr Anat. Bd. XXIV. 1885, p. 475. Born. Weitere Beitriige zur Bastardirung zwischen den einhcimisc-hen Anuren. Archiv f. mikr. Anat. Bd. XXVII. 1886, p. 192. Boveri. Ueber die Bedeutung der Richtungskorper. Sitzungsb. d. Gesellsch. f. Morphol. u. Physiol. in Miinchen. Sitzung vom 16. Nov. 1886, p. 101. Miinchener medic. Wochenschr. Jahrg. 33. Nr. 50. Boveri. Ueber die Befruchtung der Eier von Ascaris megalocephala. Sit- zungsb. d. Gesellsch. f. Morphol. u. Physiol. in Miinchen. Sit/ung vom 3. Mai, 1S87, p. 71. Boveri. Ueber den Antheil des Spermatozoons an der Theilung der Eier. Sitzungsb. d. Gesellsch. f. Morphol. u. Physiol. in Miinchen. Bd. III. 1887, p. 151. Boveri. Zellenstudien. Jena. Zeitschr. Bde. XXI. XXII. XXIV. 1887. -88, -90. Biitschli. Studien iiber die ersten Entwicklungsvorgiinge der Eizelle, Zell- theilung u. Conjugation der Infusorien. Abhandl. d. Senckenberg. naturf. Gesellsch. Bd. X. Frankfurt 1876. Biitschli. Gedanken iiber die morphologische Bedeutung der sogenannten ll:chtu:igskdrperchen. Biol. Centralblatt. Bd. IV. 1884, pp. 5-12. Biitschli. Entwicklungsg^schichtlic'ae Beitriige. Zeitschr. f. vviss. Zoologie. Bd. XXIX. 1877. Calberla. Befruchtungsvorgang beim Ei von Petromyzon Planeri. Zeitschr. f. vviss. Zoologie. B:l. XXX. 1P78, p. 437. Carnoy, J. B. La cytodierese de 1'oeuf. La vesicnle germinative et les globules polaires de 1'Ascaiis megalocephala. 1886. And La Cellule. T. III. 1887. Dewitz. Ueber Gesetzmiissigkeit in der Ortsveriinderuug der Spermatozoen und in der Vereinigung derselben mit dem Ei. Archiv f. d. ges. Physiol. Bd. XXXIX. 1886. Eberth. Die Befruchtung des thierischen Eies. Fortschritte der Medic. Nr. 14. 1884. Flemming, W. Ueber die Bildung von Richtungsfiguren in Siiugethiereiern beim Untergang Graaf scher Follikel. Archiv f. Anat. u. Physiol., Anat. Abth. 1885. Flemming, W. Ueber Bauverhaltnisse, Befruchtung u. erste Theilung der thier. Eizelle. Biol. Centralblatt, Bd. III. 1884, pp. 6 11, 67*. Flemming, W. Beitriige zur Kenntniss der Zelle, etc. III. Theil. Arch. f. mikr. Anat. Bd. XX. 1881. Fol. Sur le commencement de 1'henogenie. Archives des Sci. phys. et nat. Geneve 1877. Fol. Recherches sur la fecondation et le commencement de rheuogt'-nic. Mem. de la iSoc. de Phys. et d'Hist. nat. Geneve 1ST'.). Frommann. Article " Befruchtung " in Real-Encyclopadie der gesammten Heilkunde. 2 Aufl. Giard, Alf. Note sur les xjremiers phenomenes du de\ eloppement de l'oursin. Comptes rendus. LXXXIV. 1877 LITERATURE. 49 Greeff, R. Ueber den Ban und die Entwickhmg der Echinodermen. Sit- zungsb. d. Gesellsch. z. Beford. d gesammten Naturwiss. zu Marburg. Nr. 5. 1876. Hasse, C. Die Beziehungen der Morphologic zur Heilkunde Leipzig 1879. Henking. Ueber die Bildung von Richtungskorpern in den Eiern der Insecten und deren Schicksal. Nachr. d. kgl. Gesellsch. d. Wiss. zu Gottingen Jahrg. 1888. Hensen. Die Physiologic der Zeugung. Handbuch der Physiologic von Hermann. Ed. VI. Theil II. 1881. Hensen. Die Grundlagen der Vererbung. Landwirthsch. Jahrb. 14. 1885. Hertwig, Oscar. Beitrage zur Kenntniss der Bildung, Befruchtung u. Theilung des thier. Eies. Morphol. Jahrb. Bd. I. 1875. Hertwig, Oscar. Beitrage, etc. II. Theil. Morphol. Jahrb. Bd. III. 1877, pp. 1-86. Hertwig, Oscar. Weitere Beitrage, etc. Morphol. Jahrb. Bd. III. 1877. Hertwig, Oscar. Beitrage zur Kenntniss, etc. Morphol. Jahrb. Bd. IV. Heft 1 u. 2. 1878. Hertwig, Oscar. Welchen Einfluss iibt die Schwerkraft auf die Theilung der Zellen. Jena 1884. Hertwig, Oscar. Das Problem der Befruchtnng und der Isotropie des Eies. eine Theorie der Vererbung. Jena. Zeitschr. f. Naturwiss. Bd. XVIII. Jena 1884. Hertwig, Oscar und Richard. Experimented Untersuchungen iiber die Bedingungen der Bastardbefruchtung. Jena 1885. Hertwig, Oscar und Richard. Ueber den Befruchtungs- und Theilungs- vorgang des thierischen Eies unter dem Einfluss ausserer Agentien. Jena 1887. Hertwig,Oscar und Richard. Experimentelle Studien am thierischen Ei. Jena. Zeitschr. Bd. XXIV. 1890. Hoffmann, C. K. Zur Ontogenie der Knochenfische. Verhandl. d. koninkl. Akad. v. Wetensch. Amsterdam. Deel XXL 1881. Hoffmann, C. K. Ueber den Ursprung und die Bedeutung der sogenannten freien Kerne in dem Nahrungsdotter bei den Knochenfischen. Zeitschr. f. wiss. Zoologie. Bd. XLVI. 1888. Kastschenko. Zur Frage iiber die Herkunft der Dottsrkerne im Selachierei. Anat. Anzeiger. 1888. Kolliker. Die Bedeutung der Zellenkerne fur die Vorgange der Vererbung. Zeitschr. f. wiss. Zoologie. Bd. XLII. 1885, pp. 1-46. Kolliker. Das Karyoplasma und die Vererbung. Eine Kritik der Weis- mann'schen Theorie von der Kontinuitat des Keimplasma. Zeitschr. f. wiss. Zoologie. Bd. XLIV. 1886. Kultschitzky. Ueber die Eireifung und die Befruchtungsvorgange bei Ascaris marginata. Archiv f. mikr. Anat. Bd. XXXII. 1888. Kultschitzky. Die Befruchtungsvorgange bei Ascaris megalocephala. Archiv f. mikr. Anat. Bd. XXXI. 1888, p. 567. Kupffer. Betheiligung des Dotters am Befruchtungsakt bei Bufo variabilis u. vulgari?. Sitzungsb. d. math. Classe. d. Akad. d. Wissensch. zu Munchen, 1882, p. 608. Kupffer, C., und B. Benecke. Der Vorgang der Befruchtung am Ei der Neunaugen. Konigsberg 1873. Lovan, S, Beitrage zur Kenntniss der Entwicklung der Mollusca acephala 4 50 EMBRYOLOGY. lammellibranchiata. Abhandl. d. k. schwed. Akad. der Wissensch. 1848. Im Auszuge iibersetzt. Stockholm 1879 Mark, E. L. Maturation, Fecundation and Segmentation of Limax campestris. Bull. Museum Comp. Zoology at Harvard College. Vol. VI. issi. Massart. Sur la penetration des spermatozoides dans 1'oeuf de la grenouille Bull, de 1'Acad. roy. Sci. de Belgique. 3me ser. T. XVIII. ISs'.t. Minot. Proceed. Boston Soc. Nat. Hist. XIX. 1877. American Naturalist. 1880. Miiller, Fr. Zur Kenntniss des Furcbungsprocesses im Schneckenei. Archiv f. Naturg. 1848. Nageli, C. von. Mecbanisch-physiologische Theorie der Abstammungslehre. Jfiinchen 1884. Wussbaum, M. Ueber die Veranderung der Geschlechtsproducte bis zur Eifurchung. Arch. f. mikr. Anat. Bd. XXIII. 1884, p. 155. Nussbaum, M. Zur Differenzirung des Geschlechts im Thierreicb. Archiv f . mikr. Anat. Bd. XVIII. 1880. Wussbaum, M. Bildung und Anzahl der Richtungskorper bei Cirripedien. Zool. Anzeiger. XII. 1889. Oellacher, J. Untersuchungen iiber die Furchung und Blatterbildung im Hiihnerei. Strieker's Studien. a. d. Inst. f. exper. Pathol. 1869. Oellacher, J. Beitrage zur Geschichte des Keimblaschens im Wirbelthierei. Archiv f. mikr, Anat. Bd. VIII. 1872. Platner, G. Beitrage zur Kenntniss der Zelle und ihrer Theilung. Archiv f. mikr. Anat. Bd. XXXIII. 1889. Platner, G. Die erste Entwicklung befruchteter und parthenogenetischer Rier von Liparis dispar. Biol. Centralblatt. Bd. VIII. 1888, -89. Platner, G. Ueber die Bildung der Richtungskorperchen. Biol. Centralblatt. Bd. VIII. 1888, -89. Purkinje. Symbolae ad ovi avium historiam ante incubationem. Lipsiae 1825. Sabatier, A. Contribution & 1'etude des globules polaires et des elements elimines de 1'oeuf en general. (Theorie de la sexualite.) Montpellier 1884. Rev. des Sci. Nat. 1883, -84. Schneider, A. Das Ei und seine Befruchtung. Breslau 1883. Schultze, O. Untersuchungen iiber die Reifung und Befruchtung d^s Amphibieneies. Zeitschr. f. wiss. Zoologie. Bd. XLV. 1887. Selenka, E. Befruchtung des Eies von Toxopneustes variegatus. Leipzig 1878. Strasburger, Ed, Neue Untersuchungen iiber den Befruchtungsvorgang bei den Phanerogamen als Grundlage fur eine Theorie der Zeugung. Jena 1884. Tafani. I primi momenti dello sviluppo dei mammiferi. Publicazioni del istituto di studi superiori in Firenze. 1889. Weismann, A. Ueber die Vererbung. Jena 1883. Weismann, A. Die Continuitat des Keimplasma als Grundlage einer Theorie der Vererbung. Jena 1885. "Weismann, A. Ueber die Zahl der Richtungskorper und iiber ihre Bedeutung fur die Vererbung. Jena 1887. "Weismann und Ischikawa. Ueber die Bildung der Richtungskorper bei thierischen Eiern. Berichte d. naturf. Gesellsch. zu Freiburg i. B. Bd. III. 1887, pp. 1-44. THE PROCESS OF CLEAVAGE. 51 eismann tind Ischikawa. Weitere Untersuchungen zum Zahlengesetz der Kichtung.skdrper. Zool. Jahrbiicher. Bd. III. Abth. f. Morph. 1889, p. 515. Weismann und Ischikawa. Ueber die Paracopulation im Dapbnidenei, sowie iiber Reifung u. Befrucbtung desselben. Zool. Jabrbiicber. Bd. IV. Abth. f. Morph. 1889. Whitman, C. O. The Kinetic Phenomena of the Egg during Maturation and Fecundation. Jour. Morphol. Vol. I. 1887. Zaeharias, Otto. Neue Untersuchungen iiber die Copulation der Ge- schlechtsproducte und den Befruchtungsvorgang bei Ascaris megalo- cephala. Arcbiv f. mikr. Anat. Bd. XXX. 1887. .Zacharias, Otto. Die feineren Vorgange bei der Befruchtung des thierischen Eies. Biol. Centralblatt. Bd. VII. 1888, p. 659. CHAPTER III. THE PROCESS OF CLEAVAGE. FERTILISATION is in most instances immediately followed by further development, which begins with the division of the egg-cell — the simple elementary organism — into an ever-increasing number of small cells — the process of cleavage. We shall begin the study of cleavage with a very simple case, and here also choose as a foundation for the presentation of the subject the egg of an Echinoderm and the egg of the common Ascaris of the Horse. In the living egg of the Echinoderm the cleavage-nucleus (fig. 26 fk), which arose from the fusion of egg-nucleus and spermatic nucleus, is at first spheroidal, and lies exactly in the middle of the egg, where it forms the centre of a radiation which affects the whole yolk-mass ; but it soon begins to be slightly elongated, and at the same time to become less and less distinct, so that with the living object one might be misled into assuming that it had been completely dissolved. Before this, very regular changes in the dis- tribution and arrangement of the protoplasm around the nucleus have taken place. The monocentric radiation resulting from fer- tilisation is divided. The two newly formed radiations thereupon move to the poles of the elongated nucleus. At first small and in- significant, they rapidly extend, and finally each occupies_a _half jrf the egg (fig. 27), and the rays of the two systems meet at a sharp angle in the median plane of the egg. Just in proportion as the two radiations become more distinct, there arises, within the granular yolk, as the starting-point and EMBRYOLOGY. centre of the radiations, a figure, which may be appropriately com- pared (fig. 27) with a dumb-bell. It arises by the accumulation of a large amount of homogeneous protoplasm around the poles of the elongating nucleus, forming the two ends of the dumb-bell ; the poles may be regarded as if they were two centres of attraction. The non-granular streak, representing the handle of the dumb-bell, is the nucleus, which has meanwhile undergone a peculiar metamor- phosis and has become indistinct. A more accurate knowledge of the nuclear metamorphosis may te got by employing suitable reagents and dyes. By means of inter- mediate stages, which may be disregarded here, there arises out of Fig. 26. Fig. 26 — Egg of a Sea-urchin immediately after the conclusion of fertilisation, fk, Cleavage- nucleus. Fig. 27. — Egg of a Sea-urchin in preparation for division. there has arisen in its place a dumb-bell figure. Both figures are drawn from the living object. The nucleus is no longer to be seen ;. the vesicular nucleus the nuclear spindle (fig. 31 B), which is a typical structure for cell-division throughout the organic world. This (sp) consists of two substances, both of which, in my opinion, are derived from the quiescent condition of the nucleus — namely, (1) of a non- chromatic substance, which does not show afiinity for any dyes, and (2) of the^stainable nuclein or chromatin. The non-chromatic substance forms extraordinarily fine, and therefore at times scarcely discernible, " Spindle- fibres" which are united into a bundle, and give rise to a spindle by the convergence of their ends to points. The chromatin, on the contrary, has assumed the form of small individual granules or chromosomes, which correspond in number with the gpindle-fibres, and are so arranged that each granule adjoins a spindle-fibre at its middle point. In its totality, therefore, it con- stitutes at the middle of the spindle a plate composed of individual THE PROCESS OF CLEAVAGE. 53 granules — the nuclear plate of STRASBURGER. That which in the case •of the Sea-urchin ordinarily appears as a chromatic granule is found, upon the employment of the highest magnifying powers, — but especially in the study of objects (fig. 28 A) more suitable for this purpose, — to be a small Y-shaped loop. The number of the loops or chromosomes appears to be very definite, and subject to law for each species of animal. At the tips of the spindle there may be demonstrated, in addi- tion, two special and exceedingly minute bodies, one of which occupies the exact centre of each of the two previously mentioned systems of rays ; they are, in fact, to be regarded as the cause of the Fig. 28.— Diagram of nuclear division, after RABL. In figure 4 one sees the spindle, composed of delicate non-chromatic fibres, with the protoplasmic radiations at its tips and the chromatic loops at its middle. The splitting of the filaments of the latter has already taken place. In figure B the daughter-loops resulting from the fission have moved apart in opposite directions. In figure C*they begin to arrange themselves in a regular manner into two groups of loops. In figure D the groups of daughter-loops lie near the two poles of the spindle. latter. Inasmuch as during the elongation of the nucleus they are to be found at each of its two poles, they may be especially designated as polar corpuscles [or centrosomei\. During the whole process of the division of nucleus and cell-body, it appears as though a directing influence belongs to the two polar corpuscles. Important changes in the nuclear loops of the spindle take place during later stages of the process of division. Each loop is split lengthwise into two daughter-loops (fig. 28 A), as discovered by FLEMMING and as confirmed since then by numerous other investi- gators (STRASBURGER, HEUSER, VAN BENEDEN, RABL, and others). These daughter-loops soon move apart toward the opposite ends of the spindle (figs. 28 B, C ; see also the explanation of the figures), and approach very closely to the polar corpuscles at their tips (fig. 28 />) Thus by a complicated process a division of the stainable nuclear substance into similar halves is brought about. As the immediate EMBRYOLOGY. consequence of this the protoplasmic parts of the cell also begin at this time to be divided into halves by means of the process of cleavage, which is already recognisable externally. There is formed at the surface of the egg (fig. 29 A), in a plane passing between the two groups of loops through the middle of the spindle perpendicular to its long axis, a circular furrow, which rapidly cuts deeper and deeper into the substance of the egg, and in a short time divides it into two equal parts. Each of these contains half of the spindle Fig. 29 A.— Egg of a Sea-urchin at the moment of division. A circular furrow cuts into the yolk and halves 'it in a plane which is perpendicular to the- middle of the miclear axis and to the long axis of the dumb-bell. B.— Egg of a Sea-urchin after its division into two cells. In each resultant of the division a vesicular daughter-nucleus has arisen. The radial arrange- rnent of the protoplasm begins to become indistinct. Both figures are drawn from the living object. with half of the loops, half of the dumb-bell, and a protoplasmic radiation. The resulting halves of the egg, still surrounded in common by the vitelline membrane, then closely apply to each other the surfaces resulting from the division, and become so flattened that each one of them forms approximately a hemisphere (fig. 29 B). Internally, however, nucleus and protoplasm enter upon a brief transitory resting stage. There is developed out of the half of the nuclear spindle with its daughter-loops a vesicular homogeneous daughter-nucleus: like the first, but in the protoplasm the radial arrangement becomes le.-s and loss distinct and at last entirely disappears. h • . . .-• of the common "Maw-worm of the Horse is also a very instructive object for the study of the piocess of cleavage, as it wa& for the study of fertilisation, for it allows a still deeper insight into this process. As has already been stated, the egg-nucleus and the- THE PROCESS OF CLEAVAGE. 55 tic nucleus remain for a time separate, even after they have )proached each other. After a brief period of rest both of them begin to exhibit simultaneously the changes which precede the for- mation of the nuclear spindle. In each the chromatic substance is letamorphosed into a fine thread, which is arranged within the tuclear membrane in numerous windings. Each filament is there- ipon divided into two equally large coiled loops, the chromosomes (fig. 25 ch). Now the two vesicular nuclei lose their delimitation from the surrounding yolk, in which there arise at a little distance from each other two polar corpuscles [centrosomes], surrounded by a system of rays, which is at first faint, but subsequently becomes more distinct. Between the two centrosomes, the method of whose development no one has as yet succeeded in observing, there are formed spindle-fibres, and the four loops (chromosomes), set free by the dissolution of the two nuclear membranes, so arrange themselves that they lie upon the outside of the spindle at its equator. In the case of the egg of the Maw- worm J therefore, the union of the two sexual nuclei, which terminates the act of fertilisation, takes )lace only at the time of the metamorphosis to form the cleavage- )indle, in which metamorphosis they take an equal share. In conse- quence of this remarkable deviation from the ordinary course of the process of fertilisation, VAN BENEDEN has been able to establish the interesting and important fact that half of the chromosomes of the first cleavage-spindle are derived from the egg-nucleus, and half from the spermatic nucleus, and that consequently they may be distin- guished as female and male chromosomes. Since in this instance, just as in nuclear division ordinarily, the four loops are split lengthwise and then move apart toward the two polar corpuscles (centrosomes), there are formed two groups of four daughter-loops each, of which two"are of male origin and two of female. Each group is then meta- morphosed into the quiescent nucleus of the daughter-cell. This furnishes incontestable proof, that to each daughter-nucleus in each half of the egg, which arises as the result of the first cleavage, there is transmitted exactly the same amount of chromatic substance from the egg-nucleus as from the spermatic nucleus. The first division is followed after a brief period of rest by the second, this by the third, the fourth, etc., during which are repeated the same series of changes in nucleus and protoplasm that have just been described. Thus in quick succession the 2 first daughter-cells are divided into 4, these into 8, 16, 32, 64, etc. (fig. 30), until there has resulted a large spheroidal mass, which has received the 56 EMBRYOLOGY. name morula or mulberry -sphere, because the cells protrude as small elevations at its surface. During the second and third stages of cleavage there is easily recognisable a rigidly observed order in the direction which the pla/iies_ of cleavage sustain to each other. The second plane of cleavage always halves the first and cuts it perpendicularly ; the third plane, again, is perpendicular to the first two, and passes through the middle of the axis formed by their intersection. If one regards the ends of this axis as the poles of the egg, the first two planes of division may be designated as meridional, the third as equatorial. This uniformity is caused by the mutual relation which subsists Between nucleus and protoplasm, in which connection the two follow- /ing laws are to be noted : (1) The plane of division always cuts the ^axis of the spindle perpendicularly at its centre. (2) The position of Fig. 30. — Various stages of the process of cleavage, after GEGENBAUR. the axis of the nuclear spindle in turn depends on the form and differ- entiation of the protoplasmic body which envelops it, and in such a manner that the two poles of the nucleus take the direction of the greatest protoplasmic masses. Thus, for example, in a sphere in which the protoplasm is uniformly distributed, the centrally situated spindle may come to lie in any radius ; but in an ovoid protoplasmic body, only in the longest diameter. In a circular protoplasmic disc the nuclear axis lies parallel to its surface in any diameter whatever of the circle, but in an oval disc, as before, in the longest diameter only. Let us return now, after these general remarks, to the case under consideration. Each daughter-cell forms at the close of the first seg- mentation a hemisphere. According to the rule, the daughter-spindle cannot assume a position perpendicular to the flat surface of the hemisphere, but must lie parallel to it, so that a division into two quadrants must result. At the next segmentation the axis of the spindle must coincide with the long axis of the quadrant, whereby this becomes divided into two octants. THE PROCESS OF CLEAVAGE. 57 There are some important deviations from the process of division just described, which affect the form of the cleavage products, although leaving unaltered the finer processes relating to the nucleus. The deviations are induced, as we shall show more in detail in the in- dividual cases, by the variation in the amount of deutoplasm contained in the eggs, and by the previously described variability in its distribu- tion. One may appropriately separate the various forms of the process of cleavage into two classes, and each class into two sub- classes, although the forms merge into one another by means of transitional conditions. To the first class we assign such eggs as are' completely divided into segments by the process of cleavage. The cleavage itself we designate as total ; and according as the segments are of equal or un- equal size, we distinguish as subdivisions equal cleavage and unequal •cleavage. With total is contrasted partial cleavage. This occurs in the case of eggs which are provided with very abundant deutoplasm, and are consequently of considerable size, and in which, at the same time, the previously described separation into formative yolk and nutritive yolk has been distinctly established. In this case the for- mative yolk alone undergoes a process of cleavage, whereas the chief mass of the egg, the nutritive yolk, remains undivided, and in general unaffected, by the processes of embryonic development ; hence the name partial cleavage. This, in turn, is resolvable into the two sub- types of discoidal and superficial cleavage, according as the forma- tive yolk rests as a disc upon the nutritive yolk, or envelops the latter as a thick cortical layer. KEMAK has designated eggs with total segmentation as holoblastic, those with partial segmentation as meroblastic. We may therefore present the following scheme of cleavage : — I. TYPE— Total cleavage : ^ (#) Equal cleavage Holoblastic eggs. (b) Unequal cleavage J II. TYPE— Partial 'cleavage : ~\ O) Discoidal cleavage Meroblastic eggs. (i) Superficial cleavage J Ia- Equal Cleavage. In the general consideration of the process of cleavage we have already become acquainted with the phenomena of equal segmenta- 58 EMBRYOLOGY. tion. It remains to be added to what has been previously said, that this type is most frequent in the case of Invertebrates, and is to be encountered among Vertebrates only in the cases of Amphioxus and Mammals. With the latter, however, there early appears a slight difference in the size of the segments ; this has induced many investigators to designate the cleavage of Amphioxus and Mammals as unequal also. If I have not followed this suggestion, it is because the differences are of a trivial nature, because the nucleus in the egg-cell and also in its segments still occupies a central position, and because the different methods of cleavage are in general not sharply definable, but connected by transitional con- ditions. Concerning Amphioxus, HATSCHEK states that at the eight-cell stage four smaller and four larger cell are to be distinguished, and that from that time forward in all the subsequent stages there is to be observed a difference in size, and that the process of cleavage takes place in a manner similar to that which will be subsequently described for the Frog's egg. The egg of the Rabbit, concerning which we have the painstaking investigations of VAN BENEDEN, divides at the very outset into two segments of slightly different size ; moreover, from the third stage of division onward there occurs a difference in the rapidity with which the divisions follow each other in the different segments. After the four cleavage-spheres have been divided into eight, there is a stage with twelve spheres ; this is followed by another with sixteen, and afterwards another with twenty-four. Ib- Unequal Cleavage. As a basis for the description of unequal cleavage we may employ the Amphibian egg, the structure of which has already been con- sidered. As soon as the egg of the Frog or Triton is deposited in the water and is fertilised, and while the gelatinous envelope is swelling up, its black pigmented hemisphere ^r animal half becomes directed upward, because it contains more protoplasm and small yolk-spherules, and is specifically lighter. The want of uniformity in the distribution of the various components of the yolk also induces an altered position of the segmentation-nucleus. Whereas the latter assumes a central position on _all cases in which the deutoplasm is uniformly distributed, it invariably alters its location whenever one half of the egg is richer in deutoplasm and the other richer in. protoplasm ; it then migrates into the more protoplasmic territory.. THE PROCESS OF CLEAVAGE. 591 In the case of the Frog's egg, consequently, we find it in the black piginented hemisphere, which is turned upward. When in this case the nucleus prepares to divide, its axis can no longer assume the position of any and every radius of the egg. In consequence of the want of uniformity in the distribution of the protoplasm, the nucleus comes under the influence of the more protoplasmic pigmented part, which rests on the more deutoplasmic portion like an inverted cup, and, on account of its less specific gravity, floats at the surface, and is spread out horizontally. But in a horizontal protoplasmic disc the nuclear spindle comes to occupy a horizontal position (fig. 31 A sp). Consequently the plane of division must be formed in a vertical direction. A small furrow now • d Fig. 31. — Diagram of the division of the Frog's egj. A, Stage of the first division. B, Stage of the third division. The four segments of the second stage of division are beginning to be divided by an equatorial furrow into eight segments. P, pigmented surface of the egg at the animal pole ; pr, the part of the egg which ia richer in protoplasm ; d, the part which is richer in deutoplasm ; sp, nuclear spindle. begins to show itself — at the animal pole first, because the latter is more under the influence of the nuclear spindle, which lies nearer to it, and because it contains more protoplasm, from which proceed the phenomena of motion during division. The furrow gradually deepens downward, and cuts through to the vegetative pole. By the first act of division we get two hemispheres (fig. 32 2), each of which is composed of a quadrant richer in protoplasm and directed upward, and another poorer in protoplasm and directed downward. By this means both the position of the nucleus and the direction of its axis are again determined, when it prepares for the second division. According to the rule previously laid down, the nucleus is to be sought in the quadrant which contains the more protoplasm ; the axis of the spindle must take a position parallel to the long axis of the quadrant, and must therefore come to lie horizontally 60 EMBRYOLOGY. The second plane of division is consequently, like the first, vertical, and cuts the latter at right angles. After the conclusion of the second segmentation the Amphibian egg consists of four quadrants (fig. 32 4), which are separated from one another by vertical planes of division and possess two dissimilar poles, — one richer in protoplasm, lighter, and directed upwards ; the other richer in yolk, heavier, and directed downwards. In the case of equal segmentation we saw that at the stage of the third segmentation the axis of the nuclear spindle becomes parallel to the long axis of the quadrant. The same thing occurs here also, although in a some- what modified manner. On account of the greater accumulation of protoplasm in the upper half of the quadrant, the spindle cannot, as Fig. 32. — Cleavage of Rana temporaria, after ECKER. The numbers placed above the figures indicate the number of segments present in the corre- ponding stage. in the case of equal segmentation, lie in the middle of it, but must lie nearer to the animal pole of the egg (fig. 31 B sp). Moreover, it is exactly vertical, because the four quadrants of the Amphibian egg are definitely oriented in space on account of the differenc9 in specific gravity of their halves. In consequence of this the third plane of division must be horizontal, and must also lie above the equator of llu- eijr2 R). Tlte sei/ments ara rc/ry unlike both, in, aha and composition ; ami this is the reason why this form of segmentation has been called unequal. The four upper segments are smaller and contain less yolk, the four lower ones are much larger and richer in yolk. They are also distinguished from each other as animal cells and vegetative cells. according to the poles near which they lie. In the course of further development, the distinction between animal and vegetative cells constantly increases, for the richer the •cells, are in protoplasm the more quickly and the more frequently THE PROCESS OP CLEAVAGE. 6J do they divide. At the fourth stage the 4 upper segments are first divided by vertical furrows into 8, and then after an interval the 4 lower ones are divided in the same manner, so that the egg is now composed of eight smaller and eight larger cells (fig. 32 16). After a short resting stage the eight upper segments are again divided, this time by a horizontal furrow, and somewhat later a similar furrow divides the eight lower segments also (fig. 32 32). In the same manner the 32 segments are divided into 64 (fig. 32 64). In the stages which follow this, the divisions in the animal half of the egg are still more accelerated relatively to those of the vegetative half. While the 32 animal cells are divided into 128 segments by two divisions which follow each other in quick succession, there are still found in the lower half only 32 cells which are preparing for cleavage. It thus comes to pass that, as the final result of the process of cleavage, there exists a spheroidal mass of cells with entirely dissimilar halves, — an upper, animal half with small, pigmented cells, and a vegetative half with larger, clear cells, containing more abundant yolk. From the nature of the progress of unequal cleavage, as well a& from a series of other phenomena, one may lay down a general law, first formulated by BALFOUR, that the rapidity of cleavage is pro- portional to the concentration of protoplasm in the seyment. Cells which are rich in protoplasm divide more rapidly than those in which protoplasm is more scanty and deutoplasm more abundant. As we have seen, the Frog's egg, by reason of the difference in specific gravity between its animal and vegetative halves, by reason of the heterogeneous pigmentation of its surface, by reason of the unequal distribution of protoplasm and deutoplasm, and by reason or the eccentric position of its nucleus, allows us to pass fixed and easily deterniinable axes through its spherical body. On this account it~is~ an especially favourable object upon which to determine J/he question whether the egg allows one to recognise in the position of its parts, even before fertilisation, immediately after the same, and during the process of cleavage, fixed relations to the organs of the fully developed organism. This question has been tested by means of ingenious experiments, especially by PFLUEGER and Roux, by the latter in his " Beitrage zur Entwicklungsmechanik des Embryo." These have resulted in determining that the first cleavage plane of the egg corresponds to the median plane of the embryo, so that it separates the material of the right half of the body from that of the left. Secondly, according to Roux, the position of the head- and tail- •62 EMBRYOLOGY. ends of tl.e embryo may lie determined in the fertilised oug. That half of the egg, namely, through which the spermatic nucleus migrates to reach the egg-nucleus, becomes the tail-end of the embryo ; the opposite half becomes the head-end. Every egg, however, can be fertilised in any meridian whatever, as was demon- strable experimentally, and thereby the tail end of the embryo may be located at any chosen position in the egg. Thirdly, the plage in which the two sexual nuclei meet each other (copulation-plane) c orresponds with the iirst plane of segmentation. IIa- Partial Discoidal Cleavage. The Hen's egg serves us as the classical example for the description of discoidal segmentation. In this instance the whole process of s* n c fig. 38.— Surface view of the first stages of cleavage in the Hen's egg, after COSTE. c, Border of the germ-disc ; 6, vertical furrow ; c, small central segment ; d, large peripheral segment. cleavage takes place while the egg is still in the oviduct, during the period in which the yolk is being surrounded by the albuminous envelope and the calcareous shell. It results simply in a cleavage of the germ-disc of formative yolk, whereas the greater part of tin- egg, which contains the nutritive yolk, remains unsegmented, and becomes subsequently enclosed in an appendage to the embryo, — the so-called yolk-sac, — and is gradually consumed as nutritive material. Just as in the case of the pigmented, animal half of the Frog's egg, so also in the case of the Hen's egg, turn it in whatever direction one will, the germ- disc floats on top, because it is the lighter part. As in the Frog's c.^ir the Iirst plune of cleavage is vertical and begins at the animal pole, so in the case of the Hen's egg (fig. 33 A) a small furrow (b) makes its appearance in the middle of the disc, ..«.-.» .„,. .A . fig. 35.— Secticn through the germ-disc of a Pristiurus embryo during segm ntation, after BALFOUR. n, Nucleus ; nx, modified nucleus prior to di vision ; nx', modified nucleus in the yolk : fr furrows which appear in the yolk adjacent to the germ-disc. either animal or vegetable kingdom. Consequently the yolk-nuclei are now rightly held to be derived from the cleavage-nuclei. They are probably produced even at an early period, when the first-formed segments, which remain, as we have seen, for a long time in connection with the yolk, begin to be constricted off from the latter. This probably takes place in the following manner : there arise in the segments nuclear spindles, the halves of which go into the completely isolated embryonic cells at the time of their separation from the yolk, while the remaining halves go into the underlying yolk-layery and are there converted" into vesicular yolk-nuclei. Their number subsequently increases by means of indirect division, as is established by the fact that in sections nuclear spindles have been observed in the yolk-layer (fig. 35 nx'). While, on the one hand, there is an increase in the number of tha yotk-uude/, so, on the other h ""• ^^S^^^, the germ is called & Jtlastula or blas- tosphere (Keimblase). The latter in turn exhibits a four-fold variation of form, according to the abundance of yolk in the original egg and the method of the antecedent segmentation. In the simplest case (fig. 36) the wall of the blastula is only one layer thick ; the cells are of uniform size and cylindrical, and are closely united to one another to form an epithelium (many of the lower animals, Am- phioxus). In the case of lower, aquatic animals the blastulae at this stage aban- don the egg-envelopes, and, since their cylindrical cells develop cilia at the surface, swim about with rotating motion in the water as ciliate spheres or blastospheres. In eggs with unequal seg- mentation the blastula is dz Fiff. 37.-Mastula of Triton tseniatus. fh, Segmentation-cavity ; rz, marginal zone ; dz, cells with abundant yoik. ordinarily formed of several layers of cells, as in the case of the Frog and Triton, and at the same time it exhibits in different regions different thicknesses (fig. 37). At the animal pole the wall is thin ; at the vegetative pole, on the contrary, it is so mucn thickened that an elevation, THE PROCESS OF CLEAVAGE. 69 composed of large yolk-cells, protrudes from this side far into the cleavage-cavity, thus considerably diminishing it. The gggs with partial discoidal segmentation (fig. 38) are modified most of all, and are therefore scarcely to be recognised as blastulae. In consequence of the immense accumulation of yolk on the ventral (vegetative) side, the cleavage-cavity (B) is extraordinarily constricted, and is still preserved only as a narrow fissure filled with albuminous fluid. Dorsally its wall consists of the small embryonic cells (kz) result- ing from the process of cleavage, which are accumulated in several superposed layers ; at the surface they join each other closely, deeper they lie more loosely associated. The floor of the cleavage- cavity is formed of a yolk-mass, scattered through which are to be found the yolk-nuclei or merocytes (dk"), likewise from the which result cleavage-p r o c e s s. It is to be seen that they are espe- cially numerous at the place of tran- sition from the germ-disc to the yolk-mass. This nucleated yolk-mass very evidently corresponds to the large vegetative cells which constitute the floor of the cleavage-cavity in the case of the Amphibian egg (fig. 37). In the case of superficial cleavage there is formed, strictly speaking, no blastula, since the place where the segmentation-cavity should be developed is filled with nutritive yolk. The latter either remains fe£wo?oJ c° iVo tfo'VorvO !?o*7<>*o<&5* Fig. 38.— Median section through a germ-disc of Pristiurus in the blastula stage, after RUCKERT. B, Cavity of the blastula ; kz, segmented germ ; dk, finely granular yolk with yolk-nuclei. unsegmented or is subsequently divided, as in the Insects, into in- dividual yolk-cells. HISTORY OF THE PROCESS OF CLEAVAGB. The investigation and right comprenension of the process of cleavage have been attended with manifold difficulties. A voluminous literature has arisen on this subject. We limit ourselves to pointing out the most important dis- coveries and the chief questions which have been discussed. The first observations on the process of segmentation wrere made on the Frog's egg. Aside from short statements by SWAMMERDAM and KtiSEL VON 70 EMBRYOLOGY. ROSENHOF, it was PKKVOST ET DUMAS who were the first to describe, in 1824, the manner in which regular furrows arise on the Frog's egg, and how by means of these the whole surface is divided into smaller and smaller areas. According to the French investigators, the turrows were restricted to the sur- face of the egg. However, only a few years later, RUSCONI (1826) and C. E. v. BAER recognised that the furrows visible at the surface correspond to fissures which extend through the whole mass of the yolk, and divide it into separate parts. Even in his time VON BAER rightly characterised the whole process of segmentation, in which he discerned the first impulse of life, as an automatic division of the egg-cell, but subsequently he abandoned this, the right path, since he sought for tne meaning ot division in the dictum : that " all yolk-masses are subject to the influence of the fluid and volatile components of the fertilising material." In the next decennary there followed numerous discoveries of the process of segmentation in other animals. During this period acquaintance was also gained with partial segmentation. After RUSCONI and VOGT had seen it in the case of fish eggs, KO'LLIKER gave, in the year 1844, the first detailed description of it as seen in the eggs of Cephalopods, and four years later COSTE described it in the Hen's egg. The question of the significance of the cleavage-process has engaged the earnest attention of investigators, and has given rise to many controversies. The discussion first took a definite turn upon the establishment of the cell- theory. The question was, to determine whether and in what manner cleav- age was a process of cell-formation. Although there were already many observations on the division of eggs, SCHWANN himself took no definite posi- tion'on this question. The views of other investigators were at variance for years. There was a difference of opinion as to whether the egg or the ger- minative vesicle was a cell, whether the segments resulting from cleavage possessed a membrane or not, and whether these segments were to be regarded as cells or not. In the earlier literature the germinative vesicle and the nuclei of the cleavage-spheres were often designated as embryonic cells, and the surrounding yolk-mass as an enveloping sphere. The difficulty of com- prehending the process of segmentation was also aggravated by the false doctrine of free cell-formation from an organic matrix — the cytoblastema — founded by SCHWANN. It remained for a long time a controverted point whether the tissue-cells of the adult organism were the direct descendants of the segmentation-spheres, or whether they arose at a later period by means of free cell-formation from cytoblastema. After NAGELI on the botanical side had adopted the right course, it was the service of KO'LLIKER, REICHERT, REMAK, and LEYDIG to have paved the way to a comprehension of cleavage, and to have shown that free cell-formation does not take place, but that all cellular elements arise in uninterrupted sequence from the egg-cell. As far as regards the different kinds of cleavage, KO'LLIKER designated them as total and partial. VAN BENEDEN has given in his " Recherches sur la composition et -la signification de I'oeuf'a more exhaustive review of the subject, and has also expounded in a clear way the signification of the deutoplasm for the different kinds of cleavage. Subsequently HAECKEL mate- rially simplified the categories of segmentation recognised by VAN BENEDEN, and proposed in his " Anthropogenic " and in his paper " Die Gastrula und die Eifurchung " the classification of the methods of cleavage on which is based the scheme previously given, and according to whicli total cleavage is dhided THE PROCESS OF CLEAVAGE. 71 into equal and unequal, and partial into discoidal and superficial. At the same time HAECKBL endeavoured to derive the different methods of cleavage from one another, and apropos of this directed attention to the important role of the nutritive yolk. The processes which take place within the yolk have eluded observation and a correct interpretation even more than the external phenomena of cleav- age, so that it is only in the most recent times that we have acquired a satis- factory insight into them. It is true that the problem, as to what part the nucleus plays in segmentation, has had the uninterrupted attention of investi- gators, but without any solution having been found. For years there were in the literature two opposing views : sometimes one of them, sometimes the other, attained temporarily greater currency. According to one view — which was almost universally adopted by the botanists, and was defended on the zoological side principally by EEICHERT, and even recently by AUERBACH — the nucleus disappears before every division, and is dissolved, to be afterwards formed anew in each daughter-segment; according to the other view the nucleus, on the contrary, is not dissolved, but is constricted, becomes dumb-bell-shaped, and is divided into halves, and thereby induces cell-division. This view was taught especially by such zoologists and anatomists as C. E. v. BAEE, JOH. MULLER, KO'LLIKER, LEYDIG, GEGENBAUR, HAECKEL, VAN BENEDEN, and others, who were supported by the observations which they had made on transparent eggs of the lower animals. Light was first thrown on the disputed question at the moment when suit- able objects were studied with the aid of higher magnifications, and especially with the employment of modern methods of preparation (fixing and staining reagents). The works of FOL, FLEMMING, SCHNEIDER, and AUERBACH on the cleavage of the eggs of various animals mark a noteworthy advance. They still main- tained, it is true, that the nucleus is dissolved at the time of cleavage, but they gave a detailed and accurate description of the striking radiation which arises in the yolk upon the disappearance of the nucleus, and which during the constriction of the egg soon becomes visible in the region of the daughter- nuclei.* SCHNEIDER observed parts of the spindle-stage. Soon after this a more exact insight into the complicated and peculiar nuclear changes was obtained by means of three investigations, which were carried out independently and simultaneously on different objects, and were published in rapid succession by BUTSCHLI, STRASBURGER, and the author. It was definitely established by these observations that there is no dissolution of the nucleus at the time of division, but a metamorphosis, such as has been described in the preceding pages. At the same time I likewise proved that the egg-nucleus is not a new formation, but is derived from parts of the germinative vesicle. From this resulted the important doctrine that, just as all cells, so also all nuclei of the animal organism are derivatives in an uninterrupted sequence, the one from the egg-cell and the other from its nucleus. (Omnis cellula e cellula, omnis nucleus e nucleo.) Through these researches there was furnished for the * Radiating structures had already been observed in the yolk be Tore this, but in an incomplete manner, by different authors — by GRUBE in the Hiru- dinea, by DERBES and MEISSNER in the Sea-urchin, by GEGENBAUR in Sagitta, by KROHN, KOWALEVSKY, and KUPFFER in Ascidians, by LEUCKART iu Nema- todesj.by BALBIANI in Spiders, and by OELLACHER in the Trout. 72 EMBRYOLOGY. first time a scheme of nuclear division and cell-division, which has since proved to be correct in all essentials, even though it has undergone important improvements and additions at the hands of FOL, FLEMMING, VAN BENEDEN, and KABL. FOL published an extended monographic investigation of the process of cleavage, which he had observed in many invertebrated animals. FLEMMING, starting with nuclear division in tissue-cells, distinguished with great acumen the non-chromatic and the chromatic parts of the nuclear figure, the non- stainable nuclear spindle- fibres, and the stainable nuclear filaments and loops,, which are located upon the surface of the former. He made the interesting discovery concerning the latter, that they become split lengthwise. Ligbt was soon thrown upon this peculiar phenomenon, when HEUSER, VAN BENEDEN, and BABL, independently of each other, discovered that the halves of the split filaments moved apart toward the poles of the nucleus, and furnished the fundament for the daughter-nuclei. VAN BENEDEN at the same time made the additional and important observation on the egg of Ascaris megalocephala, that of the four chromatic loops, which are constantly to be observed in the case of the cleavage-nucleus, two are derived from the chromatic substance of the spermatic nucleus, the other two from the chromatic substance of the egg-nucleus ; and that, in consequence of the longitudinal splitting, each daughter-nucleus receives at the time of division two male and two female nuclear loops. In addition there have appeared many other recent works of value on the process of cleavage by NUSSBAUM, EABL, CARNOY, BOVERI, PLATNER, and others. Within the last few years PFLtiGER has endeavored to prove by interesting experiments that gravitation exercises a determining influence on the position of the planes of cleavage. BORX, Roux, and the author, on the contrary, thought they were able to explain division from the organisation of the egg- cell itself. In the author's article, " Welchen Einfiuss ubt die Schwerkraft auf die Theilung der Zellen ? " he recognised the causes which determine the various directions of the planes of division, (1) in the distribution of the lighter egg-plasm and the heavier deutoplasm, and (2) in the influence which the spatial arrangement of the egg-plasm exercises on the position of the nuclear spindle, and that which the position of the latter exercises upon the direction of the plane of cleavage. SUMMARY. 1. In the process of cleavage the internal and the external pheno- mena of segmentation are to be distinguished from each other. 2. The internal phenomena of cleavage find expression in changes (a) of the nucleus, (6) of the protoplasm. 3. The nucleus while in the process of division consists of a non- chromatic and a chromatic nuclear figure. The non-chromatic figure is a spindle composed of numerous fibres. The chromatic figure is formed of bent, Y-shaped nuclear filaments (chromosomes), which lie upon the surface of the middle of the spindle. At the two ends of the spindle there is found a special polar corpuscle [centrosome]. THE PROCESS OF CLEAVAGE. 73 4. The division of the nucleus takes place in the following manner , the nuclear filaments split lengthwise, and their halves move apart in opposite directions toward the ends of the spindle, and are there converted into vesicular daughter-nuclei. 5. The protoplasm arranges itself around the ends of the spindle in filaments having the form of a stellate figure (an aster), so that a double radiation or an amphiaster arises in the egg. 6. The external phenomena of cleavage consist in the division of the egg-contents into individual parts, the number of which corre- sponds to that of the daughter-nuclei. They exhibit various modifica- tions, which are dependent on the arrangement and distribution of the egg-plasm and the deutopiasm, as is to be seen from the fol- lowing scheme of segmentation. Scheme of the Various Modifications of the Process of Cleavage. I. Total Cleavage. (Holoblastic eggs.) The eggs, which for the most part are small, contain a small or moderate amount of deutopiasm, and are completely divided into daughter-cells. 1. Equal Cleavage. This takes place in eggs with meagre and uniformly distributed deutopiasm (alecithal). By the process of cleavage there are formed segments which, in general, are of uniform size. (Amphioxus, Mam- malia.) 2. Unequal Cleavage. This occurs in eggs in which a more abundant deutopiasm is un- equally distributed, being concentrated toward the vegetative pole, and in which the cleavage-nucleus is located nearer the animal and more protoplasmic pole. Usually the segments become unequal in size only with and after the third act of division. (Cyclostomes, Amphibia.) II. Partial Cleavage. (Meroblastic eggs.) The eggs, which are often very large, ordinarily contain con- siderable quantities of deutopiasm. In consequence of the unequal distribution of this, the egg-contents are separated into a formative yolk, in which alone the process of cleavage is manifested, and a nutritive yolk, which remains undivided, and is used up during embryonic development for the growth of the organs. 74 EMBRYOLOGY. 1. Discoidal Cleavage. This takes place in eggs with nutritive yolk in a polar position The process of cleavage remains confined to the formative yolk accumulated at the animal pole, which has the form of a disc and contains only a small amount of deutoplasm. There is formed, con- sequently, a cellular disc. (Fishes, Reptiles, Birds.) 2. Superficial Cleavage. This occurs in the case of eggs with central yolk. In typical cases the nucleus alone, which occupies the middle of the egg, under- goes repeated division. The numerous daughter-nuclei which arise in this manner migrate into the layer of protoplasm which invests the central nutritive yolk, and the protoplasm is thereupon divided into as many segments as there are nuclei lying in it. There is formed a germ-membrane (Keimhaut). (Arthropods.) * • 7. Eggs with total cleavage are designated as holoblastic, eggs with partial cleavage as meroblastic. 8. The direction and position of the first cleavage-plane are strictly conformable to laws which are founded in the organisation of the cell ; they are determined by the following three factors : — First factor. The cleavage-plane always divides the axis of the nucleus which is preparing for division perpendicularly at its middle. Second factor. The position of the axis of the nucleus during division is dependent upon the form and differentiation of the en- veloping protoplasm. In a protoplasmic sphere the axis of the nuclear spindle, occupying the centre of the sphere, can lie in the direction of any radius what- ever ; but in an oval protoplasmic body, only in the longest diameter. In a circular disc the nuclear axis lies parallel to its surface in any diameter of the circle, but in an oval disc only in the longest diameter. Third factor. In the case of eggs of unequal segmentation, which, in consequence of their unequally distributed, polar deutoplasm, are geocentric, and therefore assume when in equilibrium a parti- cular position, the first two planes of cleavage must be vertical, and the third must be horizontal and placed above the equator of the sphere. LITERATURE. 75 LITERAriTRE. In addition to the writings -ited in the second chapter sec : — Auerbach. Organologische Studien. Heft I. und Heft II. Breslau 1874. Baer, C. E. von. Die Metamorphose des Eies der Batrachier. Miiller Archiv. 1834. Born, G. Ueber die Furchung des Eies bci Doppelbildungen. Breslauer sirztl. Zeitschr. 1887. Nr. 15. Coste. Histoire generale et particuliere du developpement des corps organises. 1847—1859. Flemming. Ueber die ersten Entwicklungserscheinungen am Ei der Teich- muschel. Archiv f. mikr. Anat. Bd. X. p. 257. 1874. Flemming. Beitriige zur Kenntniss der Zelle und ihrer Lebenserscheinungen. Archiv f. mikr. Anat. Bd. XVI. p. 302. 1878. ITlemming. Neue Beitiiige zur Kenntniss der Zelle. Archiv f. mikr. Anat. Bd. XXIX. p. 389. 1887. Pol, H. Die ersteEntwicklungdesGeryonideneies. Jena. Zeitschr. Bd. VII. 1873. Pol, H. Sur le doveloppement des Pteropodes. Archives de Zoologie exp6r et gen. T. IV. and V. 1875-76. Oasser. Eierstocksei. u. Eileiterei des Vogels. Marburger Sitzungsb. 1884. Haeckel, E. Die Gastrula und Eifurchung. Jena. Zeitschr. Bd. IX. 1875. Heape, "Walter. The Development of the Mole, the Ovarian Ovum, and Segmentation of the Ovum. Quart. Jour. Micr. Sci. Vol. XXVI. pp. 157 174. Vol. XXVII. pp. 123-63. 1886. Kolliker. Entwicklungsgeschichte der Cephalopoden. Zurich 1844. Leydig, Fr. Die Dotterfurchung nach ihrem Vorkommen in d. Thierwelt und nach ihrer Bedeutung. Oken's Isis. 1848. Pnuger, E. Ueber den Einfluss der Schwerkraft auf die Theilung der Zellen. Arch. f. d. ges. Physiol. Bd. XXXI. p, 311. 1883. Pfluger, E. 2. Abhandlung. Bd. XXXII. pp. 1-71. 1883. Prevost et Dumas. 2me Mem. sur la Generation. Ann. des sci. nat. T. II. pp. 100, 129. 1824. Babl. Ueber Zelltheilung. Morphol. Jahrb. Bd. X. p. 214. 1885. Rauber, A. Furshung u. Achsenbildung bei Wirbelthieren. Zool. Anzeiger, p. 461. 1883. Rauber, A. Schvverkraftversuche an Forelleneiern. Berichte der naturf. Gesellsch. zu Leipzig. 1884. Heichert. Der Furchungsprocess und die sogenannte Zellenbildung um Inhaltsportionen. Miiller s Archiv. 1846. Remak. Sur le developpement des animaux vertebres. Comptes rendus T. XXXV. p. 341. 1852. Houx. Ueber die Zeit der Bestimrnung der Hauptrichtungen des Frosch- embryo. Leipzig 1883. Roux. Ueber die Bedeutung der Kerntheilungsfiguren. Leipzig 1883. Roux. Beitrage zur Entwicklungsmechanik des Embryo. Nr. 4. Archiv f. mikr. Anat. Bd. XXIX. p. 157. 1887. Roux. Die Entwicklungsmechanik der Organismen, eine anatomische Wis- senschaft der Zukunft. Wien 189C. Rusconi. Sur le de"veloppement de la grenouille. Milan 1828. 76 EMBRYOLOGY. Salensky, W. Bef ruchtung und Furchung des Sterlet-Eies. Zool. Anzeiger. Nr. 11. 1878. Sarasin, C. F. Reifung u. Furchung des Reptilieneies. Arbeiten a. d. zool.-zoot. Inst. Wurzburg. Bd. VI. p. 159. 1 883. Schneider. Untersuchungen iiber Plathelminthen. Jahrb. d.oberhessischen Gesellsch. f. Natur- u. Heilkunde. 1873. Strasburger. Zellbildung und Zelltheilung. 3. Aufl. Jena 1875. CHAPTER IV. GENERAL DISCUSSION OF THE PRINCIPLES OF DEVELOP- MENT. A SIMPLE principle has exclusively controlled the embryonic pro- cesses hitherto considered. By means of the cleavage of the egg- substance, or cell-division, alone the originally simple elementary Organism has been converted into a cell-colony. This presents the simplest conceivable form, inasmuch as it is a hollow sphere, the wall of which is composed of one or several layers of epithelial cells. But the principle of cell-division is not adequate for the production, out of this simple organism, of more complicated forms with dissimilar organs, such as the adult animals are; further progress in davelop- ment can be brought about from this time forward only by the supervention of two other principles, which are likewise simple; namely, the principle of unequal growth in a cell-membrane, and the principle of the division of labour, together with the histological differentiation connected with it. Let us consider first the principle of unequal growth, When in a cell-membrane the individual elements continue to divide uniformly, the result will be either a thickening or an increase in the surface of the membrane. The former takes place when the plane of division has the same direction as the surface of the membrane, the latter when it is perpendicular to the surface. With the increase in the extent of surface the cells which were at first present are uniformly and gradually crowded apart by the introduction of the new daughter- cells, inasmuch as they are soft and plastic, and are joined together only by means of a soft cementing substance. Were we to assume that only such a growth took place in the case of the blastula during its further development, nothing else could come of it except an ever larger and thicker- walled hollow sphere of cells. GENERAL DISCUSSION OF THE PRINCIPLES OF DEVELOPMENT. 77 The operation of an unequal growth of the surface produces quite another result. When in the middle of a membrane the cells of a single group within a short time repeatedly undergo " division " by vertical planes, they will be suddenly compelled to claim for themselves much greater surface, and they will consequently exert a vigorous pressure, due to growth, upon the cells in their vicinity, and will tend to push them apart. But in this case a separation of contiguous cells, such as takes place with gradual and uniformly distributed interstitial growth, will be impossible ; for the surrounding cells, remaining in a passive condition, will constitute, as it were, a rigid frame, as His has expressed it, around the extending part, which, in consequence of accelerated growth, demands an increased area. It must therefore secure room for itself in another manner, and increase its surface by abandoning the level of the passive part through the formation of a fold in either one direction or the other. The fold will be still further increased, and forced farther from the original level, if the increased activity of the process of cell-division in it continues. Thus by means of unequal growth there has now arisen out of the originally uniform membrane a new recognisable part, or a special organ. When the folding membrane encloses a cavity, as is the case with the blastula, there are two cases conceivable in the formation of folds. In the first place, the membrane may be folded into the interior of the body, a process which in embryology is called invagination or involution. Secondly, there may arise by evagination a fold, which projects free beyond the surface of the body. In the first case numerous variations in the details are possible, so that the most various organs, as, e.g., the glands of the animal body, parts of the sensory organs, the central nervous system, etc., are formed. In the origin of glands a small circumscribed circular part of a cellular membrane is infolded as a hollow cylinder (fig. 39 1 and 4), towards the interior of the body, into the underlying tissue, and by continuous growth may attain considerable length. The invagina- tion develops into either the tubular or the alveolar form of gland (FLEMMING). If the glandular sac possesses from its mouth to its blind end nearly uniform dimensions, we have the simple tubular gland (fig. 39 *), — the sweat glands of the skin, LIEBERKUHN'S glands of the intestine. The alveolar form of gland differs from this in that the invaginated sac does not simply increase in length, but expands somewhat at its end (fig. 39 5, db), while the other part remains 78 EMBPYOLOGY. db db db Fig. 39.— Diagram of the formation if glands. 1, Simple tubular gland ; 2, b;-iuched tubular gland : 3, branched tubular gland with anastomosing branches ; 4 and 5, simple alveolar glands ; a, duct ; db, vesicular enlargement ; 6, branching alveolar gland. narrow and tube-like and serves as its duct (a). More complicated forms of glands arise, when the same processes to which the simple glandular sac owes its origin are repeated on the wall of the sac 12 345 e when on a small tract of it a more vigorous growth again takes place, and a part begins to grow out from the main tube as a lateral branch (fig. 39 2 and 6). By numerous repetitions of such evaginations, the originally simple tubular gland may acquire the form of a much - branched tree, upon which we distinguish the part formed first as trunk, and the parts which have arisen by outgrowths from it as chief branches and branchlets of first, second, third and fourth order, according to their ages and correlated sizes. According as the lateral outgrowths remain tubular or become enlarged at their tips, there arise either the compound tubular glands (fig. 39 2) (kidney, testis, liver), or the compound alveolar glands (fig. 39 6) (sebaceous glands of the skin, lungs, etc.). Again, the invaginating part of an originally flat membrane assumes other forms in the pro- duction of sense organs and the central nervous system. For example, the part of the organ of hearing which bears the nerve terminations — the membranous labyrinth — is developed out of a small tract of the surface of the body, which becomes depressed into a small pit (fig. 40) in consequence of its acquiring an extraordinary vigor in growth. The edges of the auditory pit then grow toward one another, so that this is gradually con- verted into a little sac, which still opens out at the surface of the body by means of a narrow orifice only (fig. 40 a). Finally, the Fig. 40.— Diagram of the formation of the audi- tory vesicle. a, Auditory pit ; b, audi- tory vesicle, which :ia» arisen by a process of constriction, and still remains connected with the outer germ-layer by means of a solid stalk of epithelium. GENERAL DISCUSSION OF THE PRINCIPLES OP DEVELOPMENT. 79 narrow orifice closes. Out of the auditory pit there has arisen a closed auditory sac (b), which then detaches itself completely from its parent tissue, the epithelium of the surface of the body. Afterwards. simply by means of the unequal growth of its different regions, by means of constrictions and various evaginations, it acquires such an extraordinarily complicated form, that it has justly received the name of membranous labyrinth, as will be shown in detail in another chapter. The development of the central nervous system may serve as the last example of invagination. Spinal cord and brain take their origin at an early epoch from the layer of epithelial cells which limits the outer surface of the body of the embryo. A narrow band of this epithelium lying along the axis of the back becomes thickened, and is distinguished from the thinner part of the epithelium, which produces the epidermis, as the medullary plate (fig. 41 A mp). Inasmuch as the plate grows more rapidly than its surroundings, it becomes in- folded into a gutter which is at first shallow, the medullary groove. This becomes deeper as a result of further increase of substance. At the same time the edges (fig. 41 B mf), which form the transition from the curved medullary plate to the thinner part of the cellular membrane, become slightly elevated above the surrounding parts, and constitute the so-called medullary folds. Subsequently these grow toward each other, and become so apposed that the furrow becomes a tube, which still remains temporarily open to the outside by means of a narrow longitudinal fissure. Finally, this fissure also disappears (fig. 41 C) ', the edges of the folds grow together ; the closed medullary jtube (n), like the auditory vesicle, then detaches itself completely along the line of fusion (suture) of the cell-membranes of which it was originally a component part and becomes an entirely independent organ (n). Let us now examine somewhat more closely the mechanism of the fusion and detachment of the neural tube. The two medullary folds are each composed of two layers, which are continuous with each other at the edge of the fold, — the thicker medullary plate (mp), which lines the furrow or tube, and the thin- ner epidermis (ep), which has either a more lateral or a more super- ficial position. When, now, the folds come into contact, they fuse, not only along a narrow edge, but over so extensive a tract that epidermis is joined to epidermis, and that the edges of the medullary plate are joined to each other. The medullary tube thus formed, and the continuous sheet of epidermis that stretches across it, are by 80 EMBRYOLOGY. means of an intermediary cell-mass still in continuity along the suture produced by the concrescence. But a separation soon takes place mp ep Ih mk* it t Fig. 41— Cross sections through the dorsal halves of three Triton larvae. A, Cross section through an egg in which the medullary folds (mf) begin to appear. S, Cross section through an egg whose medullary furrow is nearly closed. C, Cross section through an egg with closed neural tube and well-developed primitive segments. mf, Medullary folds ; mp, medullary plate ; n, neural tube (spinal cord) ; ch, chorda ; cp, epidermis, or corneal layer; mk, middle germ-layer; mk\ parietal, ink'2, visceral sub- division of the middle germ-layer ; ik, inner germ-layer ; ush, cavity of primitive segment. along this line, inasmuch as the intermediary band of substance becomes narrower and narrower, and one part of it unites with tho GENERAL DISCUSSION OF THE PRINCIPLES OF DEVELOPMENT. 81 epidermis, while the other part is annexed to the medullary tube. Thus in the formation of the suture processes of fusion and of separation occur almost simultaneously, a condition which often recurs in the case of other imaginations, as in the constricting off of the auditory vesicle, the vesicle of the lens, etc. The neural tube having once become independent is subsequently segmented in manifold ways by the formation of foldings, in conse- quence of inequalities in the rate of surface growth, especially in its anterior enlarged portion, which becomes the brain. There are formed out of this by means of four constrictions five brain-vesicles, which lie in succession one after another ; and of these the most an- terior, which becomes the cerebrum with its complicated furrows and con: volutions of first, second, and third order, serves as a classical example when one desires to show how a highly differentiated organ with com- plicated morphological conditions may originate by the simple process of glding. In addition to invagination the second ethod in the formation of folds, hich depends upon a process of eva- nation, plays a no less important part in the determination of the form of animal bodies, giving rise to protuberances of the surface of the body, which may likewise assume various forms (fig. 42). As a result of exuberant growths of small circular territories of a cell-membrane there arise rod- like elevations, resembling the papilla on the mucous membrane •of the tongue (c), or the fine villi (a) in the small intestine (villi intestinales), which are so closely set that they give a velvety ap- pearance to the surface of the mucous membrane of the intestine. Just as the tubular glands may be abundantly branched, so tufted villi are here and there developed out of simple villi, sine 3 local accelerations of growth cause the budding-out of lateral branches of a second, third, and fourth order (fig. 42 b). We recall the external tufted gills of various larvae of Fishes and Amphibia, which project out from the neck-region free into the water, or the villi of the «borion in Mammals, which are characterised by still more numerous 6 Fig. 42.— Diagram of the formation of papillae and villi. a, Simple papilla ; b, branched papilla or tufted villas ; c, simple papilla, the connective-tissue core of which runs out into three points. 82 EMBRYOLOGY. branchings. The formation of the limbs is also referable to such a process of external budding. When the growth of the membrane takes place along a line, the free edges form ridges or folds directed outward, such as the valves of KERKRING or the gill-plates on the gill-arches of Fishes. From the examples cited it is clearly to be seen how the greatest variety of forms may be attained by the simple means of invagina- tion and evagination alone. At the same time, the forms may be modified by two processes of subordinate importance, by separations and by fusions which affect the cell-layers. Vesicular and sac-like cavities acquire openings by the thinning out of the wall at a place where the vesicle or sac lies near the surface of the body, until there is a breaking through of the separating partition. Thus in the originally closed intestinal tube of Vertebrates there are formed the mouth-opening and the anal opening, as well as the gill-clefts in the neck-region. The opposite process — fusion — is still more frequently to be observed. It allows of a greater number of variations. We have already seen how the edges of an invagination may come in contact and fuse, as in the development of the auditory vesicle, the intestinal canal, and the neural tube. But concrescence may also take place over a greater extent of surface, when the facing sur- faces of an invaginated membrane come more or less completely into contact, and so unite with each other as to form a single cell-mem- brane. Such a result ensues, for example, in the closure of the embryonic gill-clefts, in the formation of the three semicircular canals of the membranous labyrinth of the ear, or, as a pathological process, in the concrescence of the surfaces of contact of serous cavities. Moreover fusions may take place between sacs which come in contact with their blind ends, as very often occurs in the com- pound tubular glands (fig. 39 3). Of the numerous lateral branches which sprout out from the tubule of a gland, some come in contact at their ends with neighboring branches, fuse with them, and establish an open communication with them by the giving way of the cells at the place of contact. It is by this means that branched forms of tubular glands pass into the int-liko forms to which the testis and the liver of Man belong. In addition to the formation of folds in epithelial layers, which under a great variety of modifications determine in general the organisation of the animal body, there were mentioned, as a second GENERAL DISCUSSION OF THE PRINCIPLES OF DEVELOPMENT. 83 developmental principle of fundamental significance, division of labor and the Idstolocjical differentiation associated with it. In order to understand fully the significance of this principle in development, we must proceed from the thesis that the life of all organic bodies expresses itself in a series of various duties or functions. Organisms take to themselves substances from without ; they incorporate in their bodies that which is serviceable, and eliminate that which is not (function of nutrition and metastasis) ; they can alter the form of their bodies by contraction and extension (function of motion) ; they are capable of reacting upon external stimuli (function of sensibility) ; they possess the ability to bring forth new organisms of their own kind (function of reproduction). In the lowest multicellular organisms each of the individual parts discharges in the same manner as the others the enumerated functions necessary for organic life ; but the more highly an organism is developed, the more do we see that its individual cells differentiate themselves for the duties of life, — that some assume the function of nutrition, others that of motion, others that of sensibility, and still others that of reproduction, — and that with this division of labor is likewise joined a greater degree of com- pleteness in the execution of the individual functions. The development of a specialised duty likewise leads invariably to an altered appearance of the cell: with the physiological division of labor there al trays goes hand-in-hand a morphological or histological differentia tion . Elementary parts which are especially concerned in the duties of nutrition are distinguished as gland-cells j again others, which have developed the power of contractility to a greater extent, have become muscle-cells, others nerve-cells, others sexual cells, etc. The cells which are concerned in one and the same duty are for the most part associated in groups, and constitute a special tissue. Thus the .study of the embryology of an organism embraces chiefly two elements : one is the study of the development of form, the second the study of histological differentiation.. We may at the same time add that in the case of the higher organisms the morpho- logicul chang* s art.- accomplished principally in the earlier stages of development, and that the histological differentiation takes place in the final stages. A knowledge of these leading principles will materially facilitate the comprehension of the further processes of development. EMBRYOLOGY. CHAPTER V. DEVELOPMENT OF THE TWO PRIMARY GERM-LAYERS. ( GA STRJEA- THE OR Y. ) THE advances which are brought about during the next stages in tin* development of the blastula depend primarily upon processes of folding. By these means there arise larval forms, which are at first composed of two, and afterwards of four epithelial membranes, or germ-layers. The larval form which is composed of two germ-layers is called the It possesses an important developmental signification, AP because, as HAECKEL has shown in his celebrated Gastraea -Theory, it is to be found in each of the six chief branches of the animal kingdom, and thus furnishes a common starting-point from which along diverging lines the separate animal forms may be dtriv< d. As with blastulas, so in the case of the gastrula four din"erent_ kinds can be d ist inguish e d , according to the abundance and the method of distribution of the yolk. Starting from a simple funda- mental form, three further modifications have arisen, all of which, with the exception of a single one which is characteristic of many Arthropods, are to be encoun- tered within the phylum of Verte- brates. The simplest and dz Fig. 43.- Blastula of Amphioxus lanceolatus, after HATSCHEK. fh, Cleavage-cavity ; crz, animal cells ; vz, vegetative cells ; AP, animal pole ; VP, vegetative pole. moxt primitive form, with the considera- tion of which we have to begin, is found only in the development of Am- phioxus lanceolatus. As has been previously shown, its blastula is composed of cylin- drical cells, which are closely joined into a single-layered epithelium (fig. 43). At one place, which may be d» signat: d as tin- v<-g< 1 \\\ ive pole DEVELOPMENT OF THE TWO PRIMARY GERM-LAYERS. 85 (VP), the cells (vz) are somewhat larger and more turbid, owing to the yolk-granules lodged in them. The process of the formation of the gastrula commences at this place. The vegetative surface begins nt first to be flattened, and then to be pushed in toward the middle of the sphere. By the advance of the imagination the depression grows deeper and deeper, while the cleavage-cavity be- comes to the same degree diminished in size. Finally, the invaginated portion (fig. 44 ik) comes in contact with the inner surface of the un- Fig. M._7a3trula invaginated portion (ak) of HATSCHEK. ak, Outer germ-layer ; ik, inner germ-layer ; u, the blastllla, and Completely Wastopore, or mouth of archenterou («rf). Obliterates the cleavage- cavity. As a result there lias been formed out of the hollow sphere with a single wall a cup- shaped germ with double walls — the gastrula. ^ The cavity of the gastrulaT which results from the in vagina tion and is not to be confounded with the cleavage-cavity which it has sup- planted^ is the primitive intestine (archenteron) (ud), or the intestino- bocly cavity (coelenteron). This opens to the outside through the primitive mouth (mouth of the archenteron, blastopore) (u). Inasmuch as the names primitive intestine and primitive mouth might easily give rise to erroneous conceptions, let it be remarked, in order to preclude from the start such an event, that the cavity and its external opening which arise by this first mvagination are not jjquivalt nt to the intestine and mouth of the adult ammaL The archenteron of the germ, it is true, furnishes the fundament for the intestinal tube, but there aiv also formed out of it a mimber'of other organs, the chief of which are the subsequently formed jyToracic and abdominal cavities. The future destination of the cavity will there- fore be better expressed by the term " cwlenteron." Finally, the primitive mouth is only an evanescent structure among vertebrated animals; later it is closed and disappears without leaving a trace^ while the permanent or secondary mouth is an entirely new structure. The two cell-layers of the cup, which are continuous with each other at the edge of the blastopore, are called the two primary 86 EMBRYOLOGY. germ-layers, and are distinguish d according to their positions as the outer (ak) and the inner (in:). Whereas in the bhistula the individual cells differ only a little from one another, with the process of gastru- lation a division ot labor begins to assert itself, a fact which may be recognised in the case of the free-swimming larvae of Inver- tebrates. The outer germ-layer (ak) (also called ectoblast or ectoderm) serves as a covering for the body, is at the same time the organ of g^nsation. and e ffects locomotion when cilia are developed from the cells, as is the case with Amphioxus. The inner germ-layer (ik) (entoblast or entoderm)^]uies the ccelenteron jmd_ provides for nutri- jbion. The cell-layers thus stand in contrast to each other both as regards position and function, sines each has assumed a special duty. In view of this fact they have been designated by C. E. VON BAER as the two primitive organs of the animal body. They pres3nt us with a very instructive, because very simple, illustration of ilm manner in which two organs originate from a single fundament. By imagination the undifferentiated cells of the surface of the blastula are brought into different relations to the outer world, and have consequently been compelled to follow different courses in their development, and to adapt themselves to special duties corresponding to the new relations. The separation of the embryonic cell-material into the two primi- tive organs of VON BAER is of decisive significance for the whole subsequent course of the development of the individual cells. For a very definite portion of all the ultimate organs of the body is refer- able to each of the two primitive organs. In order to put this im- portant condition in the propar light at once, let it be stated that the outer germ-layer furnishes the epithelial covering of the body, the epidermis with the glands and hair, the fundament of the nervous system, and that part of the sense organs which is functionally most important. On this account the older embryologists imposed upon it the name of dermo-sensory layer. The inner germ-layer, on the contrary, is converted into the remaining organs of the body — into the intestine with its glands, into the body -cavity, into the muscles, etc. ; by far the greater mass of the body, therefore, is differentiated out of it, and it has to pass through the most numerous and the most trenchant metamorphoses.* * The practice of distinguishing the outer and the inner germ-layers as animal and vegetative, which was formerly in vogue and is followed even now, is not proper, and ought therefore to be given up. For the transversely striped muscu- lature of the body, which belongs to its animal organs, does not arise from DEVELOPMENT OF THE TWO PRIMARY GERM-LAYERS. 87 Larval forms quite like that of Amphioxus have also been observed in the case of Invertebrates belonging to the phyla of Coelenterata , Echinodermata, Yermes, and Brachiopoda. For the most part they (jiiil the egg-envelope, even in the gastrula stage, to swim about in the water by means of their cilia ; and they can now take nutritive substances — small infusoria, algae, or remnants of larger animals — through the primitive mouth into the digestive cavity, and make use of them in the fur- ther growth of their bodies. Likewise the substances which are not serviceable be- cause indigestible are ejected from the body through the same orifice. In the case of the higher animals the ingestion of food is not only impossible at this time, but also superfluous, because the egg and the embryonic cells arising from it still contain yolk-granules, which are gradually consumed. The modifications which qastrulation undergoes in the Amphibia are easily referable to the simpler conditions in Amphioxus. In the case of the Water- Salamander, which is to serve as an illustration in this description, one half of the blastula (fig. 45), which is called the animal half, is thin-walled and composed of small cells, which lie in two or three layers one above another, and in the case of the Frog contain black pigment. The other, or vegetative half (dz), exhibits a greatly thickened wall, composed of much larger, more deutoplasmic, polygonal cells (dz), which, loosely associated in several layers, cause a protuberance into the cavity (fh) of the blastula, which is proportionally diminished in size. Where the differentiated halves meet, a transition is effected by means of cells, forming what GOETTE has designated marginal zone (rz). Inasmuch as the specific gravity of the animal half is much less than that of the opposite half, it is without exception directed upward in water. The former the outer germ-layer, as, in consequence of false observations, was formerly believed, but rather from the primary inner germ-layer, as has now been esta- blished by many observations. Fig. 45.— Blastula of Triton taeniatus. fh, Cleavage-cavity ; dz, yolk-cells ; zone. marginal 88 EMBRYOLOGY. Fig. 46. Egg of Triton, which is developing into a gastrula, seen from the surface. u, Primitive mouth (blastopore). constitutes the thinner roof, the latter tho highly thickened floor, of the excentrically placed cleavage-cavity. When the gastrula begins to be developed, the invagination takes place on one side in the marginal zone (fig. 46 it), and is distinguishable externally by means of a sharp, afterwards horseshoe-shaped furrow, which is bounded on one fide by small cells, which in the case of the Frog contain black pigment, on the other side by large unpigmented elements. At the fissure-like blasto- pore there are infolded into the interior of the blastula (fig. 47 u) along its dorsal lip (dl) small cells, along its ventral lip (vl] the large deutoplasmio elements of the vegetative half; the former constitute the roof, the latter the floor, of the ccelenteron (ud). The latter appears in the first stages of the invagination simply as a narrow fissure alongside the capacious cleavage-cavity (ffi) ; soon, however, it causes a com- plet«' obliteration, of this cavity, the f unelus of the invagination becoming enlarged into a broad sac, while the entrance always remains narrow and fissure-like. Since the coelenteroii of the Amphibia was first ob- served by the Italian investigator, RUSCONI, it is ordinarily mentioned in the older writings as RUSCONI'S digestive ud dl cavity, and the blasto- the Fig. 47. — Longitudinal [sagittal] section through an egg of Triton at the beginning of gastrulation. ak, Outer germ-layer ; ik, inner germ-layer ; fh, cleavage- cavity ; ud, coelenteron ; u, blastopore ; dz, yolk- cells; dl and vl, dorsal and ventral lips of tlie coelenteron. pore likewise as RUSCONIAN anus. At the close of the process of invagination the whole yolk-mass, or the vegetative half of the blast ula, has 1. -rn taken into the interior to form the lining of the coulenterpn, being at the same time over- grown by a layer of small cells (fig. 48). In the case of the Frog the DEVELOPMENT OF THE TWO PRIMARY GERM LAYERS. 89 whole surface of the germ, with the exception of a small place about as large as the head of a pin, which corresponds to the blastopore, now appears black, because the small cells are deeply pigmented. At the place excepted a part of the unpigmented yolk-mass protrudes through the blastopore and closes the entrance to it as if with a stopper (d), by reason of which it bears the significant name of vitclline plug. Of the two germ-layers of the gastrula tne outer subsequently becomes re- duced in thickness in the case of the Water-Sala- mander to a single layer of regularly arranged cylindrical cells, whereas in the case of the Frog it is composed of two or three layers of small, in part cubical, deeply pigmented elements. The inner germ-layer in the roof of the cceleiiteron likewise consists of Fig. 48.— Sagittal section through an egg of Triton after the end of gastrulation. ak, iic, dz, di, vl, ud, as in fig. 47 J d, vitelline plug ; mk, middle germ-layer. small (in the Frog, pigmented) cells, but in the floor it is composed of large yolk-cells, which, heaped together in many layers, pro- duce an elevation that projects far into the ccelenteron and partly fills it. For this reason the gastrula in Amphibia is compelled to adopt in water a definite position of rest, because the yolk-mass, being the heavier part, always assumes the lowest position (fig. 48). The germ of the Amphibia is already a bilaterally symmetrical body. The thickened, yolk-containing wall of the gastrula becomes the ventral side of the adult animal ; the opposite wall, or roof of the ccelenteron, becomes the dorsum. The blastopore indicates, as the sequel shows, the posterior end, the opposite part the head-end. There may therefore be passed through the gastrula a longitudinal, a dorso- ventral, and a transverse axis, which correspond with the axes of the adult animal. This bilateral symmetry, which appears so early in the Amphibia, is solely attributable to tne accumulation of yolk- material, and to the piling up of it on the ventral side of the ccelenteron. The development of Amphibia furnishes us with a transitional condition, which is serviceable for the (rmnpivhonsion of the much 90 EMBRYOLOGY. more highly altered form which the gaxtrula acquires in the case of_ ,eggs with partial cleavage in the daises of Selachii, Teleosts, /^fil^, and Birds. The conditions are the most readily intelligible in the case of the Selachians. That which we have described in the blastula of the Amphibia as the roof of the cleavage-cavity is in the blastula of the Selachians a small disc of em- bryonic cells (fig. 49 kz), continuous at its margin with the exti aordi- narily voluminous yolk - mass (dk), which contains nuclei, although it is not divided up into cells. This yolk-mass corre- sponds to the yolk-cells of the Amphibia, and, like the latter, forms the floor of the cleavage-cavity (B). Germ- disc and yolk thus together constitute a sac with an Fir. 49. Median section through a germ- disc of Pristiurus in the blastula stage, after RUCKERT. The posterior end of the embryo lies at the right. J3, Cleavage-cavity ; dk, yolk-nuclei ; kz, germ-cells ; V and H, front and hind margins of the germ- disc. Fig. 50. — Median section through a germ-disc of Pristiurus, in which the gastrular invagination has begun, after RUCKERT. ud, First rudiment of the coelenteron ; B, cleavage-cavity ; dk, yolk-nuclei ; fd, finely granular yolk ; gd, coarsely granular yolk ; V and H, front and hind margins of the germ-disc. almost obliterated cavity (B), and with walls differing in thickness and in differentiation. A very small part of the wall, the germ-disc, consists of cells. Tim much hirg; r and thicker portion is yolk-mass, which in the vicinity of the cavity contains nuclei, but is not divided into cells. As in the Amphibia, so here, the gastrulation begins at whafc DEVELOPMENT OF THE TWO PRIMARY GERM-LAYERS. 91 is subsequently the bind end (H) of the embryo, at a region in the zone of transition or margin of the germ-disc, in which the most superficial cells have assumed the cylindrical form, and are closely joined together (fig. 49). The margin of the disc is folded in (fig. 50) toward the cleavage-cavity (B), so that a small ccelen- teron (ud), shown in the accompanying section, and a fissure- like blastopore are distinctly recognisable. 7The neighboring yolk also participates in the invagination, since in the territory of the zone of transition the yolk-nuclei (dk), enveloped in protoplasm^ become detached from the yolk, grow into the cleavage-cavity along with the invaginated cells, and contribute to the formation of the inner germ-layer in a similar manner to that in which, in the case of the Amphibia, the vegetative cells at the lower lip of the blastopore are carried in with the invagination into the cleavage-cavity. The cleavage-cavity (B) is being continually encroached upon by the in- growth of the cells originally in its roof, which form a continuous layer projecting from behind forward. Consequently in the Sela- chians also J;h^_^rm-disc_becomes_two-layered as the result of the invagination. It lies so closs upon the yolk, that the ccelenteron appears at most as a fissure. Moreover, the invagination in the Selachians does not remain limited to one region of the original margin of the germ-disc, but soon stretches itself out over its whole posterior perimeter. The blastopore then appears as a large semi- circular or horseshoe-shaped fissure at the future posterior end of the embryonic fundament. The enormous volume of the yolk causes an important difference between the gastrulation of the Selachii and that of the Amphibia. In the case of the latter the mass of the yolk-cells was quite rapidly carried in with the invagination, and employed in the formation of the ventral wall of the ccelenteron. In the Selachians the taking up of the yolk into the interior of the body ensues only at a slow rate (in a manner to be more accurately explained later), so that for a long time only the dorsal side of the gastrula consists of two cell- layers, whereas the ventral wall is formed by the yolk-mass. The eggs of Teleosts are very nearly related to those of Selachians in their whole method of development. The same cannot be said to be true to the same extent for the eggs of Reptiles and Birds. The latter, indeed, also belong to the meroblastic type, since they have developed a large amount of yolk, and in consequence undergo partial segmentation; but in the formation of the gcrni- layers, they exhibit many peculiarities, so that they require a separate ./a,/ 92 EMBRYOLOGY. treatment. In Birds and Reptiles the investigation is accompanied with greater difficulties than in the Selachians. Particularly the development of the germ-layers in the Chick, notwithstanding the fact that the best investigators have given it their attention, has for a long time been the subject of very divergent descriptions. At the present moment, however, the main facts in the case have been established for the Bird's egg also by the very recent and excellent work of DUVAL, and upon this as a basis the gastrulation in Birds is easily to be correlated with that of the Vertebrates hitherto described. Since the Bird's egg has played such an important role in the history of embryology, and has even been called a classical object for investiga- tion, it appears necessary to go briefly into the conditions which it presents in the gastrula- stage, and in connection therewith to consider some of the important results drawn from the study of the eggs of Reptiles. The blastula arises and the germ-layers begin to be developed out of it while the Bird's egg tarries in the terminal region of the oviduct. The blastula arises in a manner which was first correctly described by DUVAL. When by the process of segmentation a small disc of cells has been formed, vw dw fh wd there appears in the _ latter a narrow fissure, the cleavage-cavity (fig. $] 51 fh), and the cell- m material is separated • into an upper layer (dw) and a lower layer (vw), which are continuous Fig. 51.— Section through the germ-disc of a freshly laid With each otlflBr at the unfertilised Hen's egg, after DUVAL. margin of the disc. The fh, Cleavage-cavity ; wd, white yolk ; vw, lower cell-layer ; die, upper cell-layer of the blastula. Upper layer consists of fully isolated cleavage- spheres, which are flattened at their surfaces of contact and arranged into an epithelium-like layer. They correspond to the tbin-walled half of the blastula in Triton (fig. 45), which has already been designated as the animal half. The lower layer is composed of larger cleavage-spheres, which are still in great part continuous by means of their lower halves with the white yolk (wd), which is spread out beneath the germ-disc and is known as PANDER'S nucleus. Yolk-nuclei (mrrocytrs) are also found here in great DEVELOPMENT OF THE TWO PRIMARY GERM-LAYERS. 93 numbers, especially around the whole periphery of the germ-disc. Since they increase in number by nuclear division, and since some of them, enveloped in protoplasm, become detached from the yolk, they contribute to the continuous growth of the germ- disc, a process which has already (p. 65) been described as supplementary cleavage. The lower cell-layer, together with the whole yolk-mas?, with its free nuclei, must be compared to the vegetative half of the blastula of Triton (fig. 45 dz). The gastrulation proceeds from the posterior margin of the germ- disc, and begins even some time before the egg is laid. The study of it is coupled with great difficulties, and demands, most of all, that, in the investigation of the disc by means of sections, one should be accurately informed concerning the position of its anterior and posterior margins. The orientation is essentially facilitated by the fact that, in the case of every Hen's egg, with rare exceptions, the side toward which the front end of the embryo is directed can !>«• stated accurately before opening the shell. This results from the following rule established by KUPFFER, ROLLER, GERLACH, and DUVAL, When one so places an egg in front of him that the blunt pole is turned to the left, the more pointed one to the right, then a line uniting the two poles divides the germ-disc into a half on the side toward the observer, which becomes the hind end of the embryo, and a forward half, which is developed into the head-end. By taking into account this rule, one can establish a difference on the germ- disc even during the process of cleavage. In the anterior region the cleavage takes place more slowly than in the posterior half. Con- sequently larger embryonic cells are found in front, smaller and more numerous ones behind (OELLACHER, KOLLIKER, DUVAL). The difference between anterior and posterior becomes more evident at the beginning of gastrulation. If one now examines carefully the thickened margin of the germ- disc (Eandwulst of German writers, bourrelet blastodermique of DUVAL). it is seen that the disc is limited in front and on the sides by a notched and indistinct boundary, but behind, on the contrary, by a sharper contour. The latter is caused by the fact that the marginal ridge, in consequence of a more vigorous growth of the cells, has become thickened and more opaque, and has assumed a whiter colour. It is distinctly recognisable from its surroundings as a whitish crescentic figure (fig. 52 A s). Often there is also observable in the crescent a narrow furrow, the crescentic groove (Sichelrinne, KQLLER), by means of which the germ- disc acquires a still sharper limitation behind. EMBRYOLOGY. DUVAL has proved by means of sections, part of which was made in a transverse direction, and part in the sagittal, that the Bird's egg is now in the gastrula stage. Especially instructive are the two median Fig. 52 A.~The unincubated germ-disc of a Hen's egg, after ROLLER. d, Yolk ; ksch, germ-disc ; s. crescent ; V and //, anterior and posterior margins of the germ-disc. B.— The germ-disc of a Hen's egg during the first hours of incubation, after KOLU.R. d, Yolk ; ksch, germ-disc ; Es, embryonal shield ; s, crescent ; sk, knob of the cre.cont ; V and H, anterior and posterior margins of the germ-disc. sections, figs. 53 and 54. As is to be seen at once in fig. 53, which re- presents the somewhat younger stage, the crescentic groove described as occupying the posterior part of the marginal ridge (vl) is continued in the form of a narrow fissure (ud hi vl ud ak ik Whereas in the blastula stag (fig. 51) the lower cell- layer passed over con- tinuously into the white yolk, it is now sharply separated from it as far as the fissure extends. In fig. 53 this separation has been completed only in the posterior half of the germ -disc ; in the anterio trary, (dk) and yolk are still continuous. Ilouev r, in tlic somewhat older stage (fig. 54) the connection is terminated in this region also, since the fissure (ud) has extended itself nearly to the anterior margin of the disc (vr). In consequence of this process the part of the white yolk which lies beneath the fissure has become destitute of cells and nuclei, with the exception of the marginal territory, where, Fig. 53.— Longitudinal section through the germ-disc of an unincubated egg of the Siskin (Carduelis spinus). after DUVAL. ak, Outer, ik, inner germ-layer ; wd, white yolk ; dk, yolk- nuclei ; ud, ccelenteron ; rl, anterior lip, hi, posterior lip at the place of invagination (crescentic groove or blastopore). r half, on the con- cells DEVELOPMENT OF THE TWO PRIMARY GERM-LAYERS. 95 especially behind (hi) the crcscentic groove, free nuclei are constantly to be found keeping up the supplementary cleavage. Owing to the appearance of the new fissure (subgerminal cavity) (fig. 53 ud}, the cleavage- cavity (fig. 51 fh) is almost completely obliterated. The two cell-layers of the blastula-stage (fig. 51 dw, vw), described as lying one above and one below the cleavage- cavity, have_com£clpsetogether (figs. 53 and 54), being separated from each other by only a narrow fissure. In the upper layer (ak) the cells have assumed a cubical, and at a somewhat later stage a cylindrical, form, and constitute a compact epithelial membrane. The lower layer (ik) is composed of larger roundish and loosely arranged cells in several layers. The former is the primary outer germ-layer, the latter the inner layer. In the region of the posterior marginal ridge (vl), where the cells are at the same time engaged in more active proliferation, the two layers are continuous with each other. The highly important processes, by means of which are produced the conditions repre- sented in figs. 53 and 54, present many points of comparison with the ga stimulation of the Selachians and Amphibia. We can conceive that the newly appearing fissure has arisen, as in the case of the germ-disc of Pristiurus (fig. 50), by an infolding, in such a way that, as in the former case, cells grow inward from tne posterior marginal ridge ; and that at the same time, at the deep part of the in- vagination, the cells which are originally continuous with the yolk (fig. 53 dk] detach themselves from the latter, and are employed for the increase of the inner gerin layer. If this explanation is correct, the fissure (ud) which now exists be- tween the inner germ-layer and the floor of the yolk corresponds to the coelenteron, as GOETTE and EAUBER have already remarked, and as DUVAL has for the first time demonstrated ; moreover, the cres- •a-3 96 EMBRYOLOGY. centic groove (fig. 52 s) corresponds to the blastopore ; the thickened portion of the marginal ridge (fig. 53 vl) which lies in front of the crescentic groove, within whose territory the two primary germ- layers are continuous with each other, is the anterior or dorsal lip of the blastopore; and the yolk (hi) which lies behind the crescnitic groove, and which at this early stage contains numerous free nuclei, may be designated as the posterior or ventral lip of the blastopore. The develop- v ment of the ccelenteron is the cause of the gradual re- duction of the cleavage - cav- ity, and of its persisting only as a narrow fis- -, sure separating the primary y. germ-layers. The points of ^ comparison i with the gas- t nil a of Triton (fig. 47) are made evident // as soon as we Tig. 55.— Embryonic fundamsnt of Lacsrta agilis, after KUPFFER. , , hf, Area pellucida ; df, area opaca ; u, blastopore ; s, crescent ; es, em- r e P * a c e the bryonic shield. V, anterior, //, posterior end. inaSS of Volk- c:lls with un- segmented yolk, and imagine nuclei imbedded in the latter in the region of the ventral lip of the blastopore. Through the exposition given by DUVAL, it appears to me that the contest concerning the origin of the two primary germ-layers in Lirds has been happily settled. .For a long time there have existed on this very question two irreconcilable views. According to the older view, to which many investigators still cling, the germ-disc which results from the process of cleavage is divided by fission into an upper and a lower layer (PANDER, VON BAER, REMAK, KOLLIKER, His, and others). According to the other one (HAECKEL, GOETTE, EAUBER, DUVAL, and ethers), the lower layer has arisen by DEVELOPMENT OF THE TWO PRIMARY GERM-LAYERS. 97 an infolding. Only by_means of the theory of infolding can be ex- plained the different conditions of the anterior and posterior margins of the germ-disc, the more active cell-growth in the territory of the crescent, the existence of a crescentic groove, and the continuity of the two primary germ-layers which is demonstrable in that region. Only by means of this theory, finally, is the relation ot Birds to the lower classes of the Vertebrates made possible. The discoveries which KUPFFER UND BENECKE have made in their investigations of Reptiles, which are so closely related to Bird<, also contribute to the elucidation of the pending controversy. In the case of Lacerta agilis (fig. 55), Emys europrea, etc., there is found, as in the casa of the Hen at a corresponding stage of development, at the boundary of the pellucid and opaque areas of the posterior end of the germ-disc, an exuberant cell-growth in the form of a crescent (s). In the middle plane and slightly in front of this crescent there is to be seen a, small, transversely placed, fissure-like opening (u), which leads into a blind sac and is comparable to the crescentic groove. KUPFFER rightly interprets the opening as the blastopore, which is enclosed between an anterior and a posterior lip, and the cavity as the coelenteron. He also draws a comparison between the corre- sponding structures in Birds and Reptiles.* Let us now direct our attention to the succeeding developmental stages of the germ-disc of the Chick. These consist, chiefly, in a constant increase of the superficial extent of the disc. In the freshly laid, unincubated egg (fig. 54) the outer germ-layer (ak) is composed of a single sheet of closely united cylindrical cells ; the inner layer (ik), on the contrary, consists of a two-layered to three-layered bed of somewhat flattened elements, which are only loosely associated. Under the influence of incubation the superficial extension of the germ-disc makes rapid advances (fig. 56). In this process the outer germ-layer (ak) outstrips the inner, and terminates in a region of the * In the interpretation of the manner in which the invagination takes place in the case of the eggs of Reptiles and Birds, I differ from other investigators who also maintain that a gastrulation takes place (GOETTE, HAECKEL, RAUBER, BALFOUR, and others). They regard the whole margin of the germ- disc as the blastopore, at which the outer germ-layer bends over to become continuous with the inner layer. According to my interpretation, the invagina- tion occurs at a small circumscribed place of the margin. The blastopore is irom the beginning surrounded by cells both on its anterior and its posterior lip. The relation of the blastopore as well as that of the germ-layers to the yolk will be more fully dealt with hereafter. 7 98 EMBRYOLOGY. yolk where the latter has not yet undergone division into entodermic cells. In the form of its cells it is, in every respect, in sharp con- trast with the inner layer. While the ecto-^ dermic cells (fig. 56 ak) attain their greatest height in the middle ot the germ-disc, they gradually decrease in height toward the mar- gin, and undergo a transition into cubical and finally into flat- tened elements (fig. 57). The reverse is the case with the inner germ- layer ; the latter has now become converted in the middle of the germ- disc (fig. 56 ik) into a single layer of much flattened scale-like cells, which are closely united into a thin membrane. Toward the periphery they become somewhat larger and more poly- gonal (fig. 57), and here, at some distance inside the free margin of the outer germ-layer, they become merged in the white yolk (dw), which is abundantly provided with yolk-nuclei (dk) in the region of the transi- tion. This region of the DEVELOPMENT OF THE TWO PRIMARY GERM-LAYERS. 99 yolk is designated as the yolk- wall (vitelline rampart). It serves for the augmentation of the inner germ-layer, in that the free nuclei increase in number by division, and keep up the process of supplementary cleavage already mentioned. During incubation the liquefaction of the yolk makes further pro- gress (fig. 56) and leads to the formation of a depression (ud\, which continually increases in depth and breadth, and over which the germ- disc arches like a watch-glass. Upon examination from the surface its middle, as far as the fluid reaches under it, appears clear and translucent, whereas the marginal area, which lies upon the opaque yolk, appears dark. Such a distinction is still more observable when one detaches the whole germ-disc from the yolk, for in the region of the fluid-filled space the thin .and transparent germ- layers come off easily and clean from their substra- tum, whereas at the rim, from the point where the Fig. 57. — Section through the margin of the germ-disc of a Hen's egg that had been incubated for six hours, after DUVAL. ak, Outer germ-layer ; dz, yolk-cells ; dk, yolk-nuclei ; dw, yolk- wall. inner germ-layer merges with the yolk-wall out- ward, turbid yolk-substance remains clinging to the germ disc. For a, long time the middle, clear, circular area has been designated in embryology as the clear germinal area (art a pellucMa), and the more cloudy, ring-like rim as the opaque germinal area (area opaca}.. In the next chapter I shall treat more in extenso of the important •changes which take place — up to the time when the egg is laid and during the first hours of incubation — in the vicinity of the crescentic groove and the anterior lip of the blastopore, because they are connected with the development of the middle germ-layer. It is still more difficult than in the case of the Chick to interpret in its details the development of the germ-layers in Mammals, and to refer it back to the gastrulation of the other Vertebrates. Especial service has been rendered through the painstaking investigation of the^e conditions : in the earlier times by BISCHOFF, in later years by HENSEN, LIEBERKIJHN, VAN BENEDEN, KOLLIKER, and HEAPE. The object of investigation which has been made use of in this work, and which we shall employ as the basis of our description, has usually been the Rabbit : besides this, the Bat and the Mole have also been employed. 100 EMBRYOLOGY. While the Mammalian egg is gradually impelled through the oviduct toward the uterus by the ciliary motion of the epithelium, it becomes converted by the cleavage process into a spherical mass of small cells (fig. 58 A). Then there arises within it, by the secretion, of a fluid, a small fissure-like cleavage-cavity (fig. 58 JS). The germ has consequently entered upon the vesicularor blastula stage. The wall of the blastula, or vesicula blastodermica, is composed of a single layer of polygonal cells, arranged, as has been known since BISCHOFF'S works, in mosaic, with the exception of a small region, where the wall, as in the case of the Amphibian blastula, is thickened by an accumulation of somewhat more granular and darker cells^ Tig. 58.— Optical sections of a Rabbit's egg in two stages immediately following cleavage, after ED. v. BENEDEN. Copied from BALFOUR'S "Comparative Embryology." A, Solid cell-mass resulting from cleavage. £, Development of the blastula by the formation of a cleavage-cavity in the cell-mass. (According: to VAN BENEDEN'S interpretation, ep is epiblast ; hy, hypoblast ; bp, blastopore.) which produce a knob-like elevation that projects far into the cleavage-cavity. A peculiarity preeminently characteristic of the further develop- ment of Mammals is that here, as in no other Vertebrate, the blastula increases enormously in size (fig. 59), by the accumulation of fluid which contains much albumen and produces a granular coagulum upon the addition of alcohol ; it soon acquires a diameter of 1*0 mm. Of course, with these processes of growth the zona pellucida is altered and distended into a thin membrane. A gela- tinous layer (zp) already secreted by the oviduct envelops the latter. In Rabbits' eggs which are a millimetre in diameter the wall of the blastula has become very thin. The mosaic- like cells arranged in a single layer have become very much flattened. Also the knol> DEVELOPMENT OF THE TWO PRIMARY GERM-LAYERS. 101 of cells, which projects into the cleavage-cavity, has become meta- morphosed and has spread itself out more and more in the form of a disc-like plate, which is continuous at its attenuated margins with the thin wall of the blastula. The further processes of development take place principally in this plate. Its most superficial cells are flattened out to thin scales, such as also form the wall of the blastula elsewhere ; its remaining elements, on the contrary, ar- ranged in from two to three superposed layers, are larger and richer in protoplasm. Up to this time the embryo of the Mammal is in the blastula stage. It still consists everywhere of a single germ -layer. For the view which has been advanced by many persons, that the germ-disc in this Fig. 59.— Rabbit's egg, 70-90 hours after fertilisation, after ED. v. BENEDEN. Copied from BALFOUB'S "Comparative Embryology." bv, Cavity of the blastula ; zp, [gelatinous layer surrounding the] zona pellucida ; ep, hy, as in Fig. 58. Fig. 60. — Gross section through the almost circular germinal area of a Rabbif » egg 6 days and 9 hours old (diameter 0*8 mm.), after BALFODR. f both the inner and outer yerm-layerSj whereby four new chief organs of the vertebrate body are called into existence. Out of the inner primary germ-layer arise (1) the two middle germ-layers, which enclose between them the body-cavity ; (2) the secondary en- toderm or entoblast (Darmdriisenblatt), which lines the secondary intestine of vertebrated animals ; and (3) the fundament of the axial skeleton, the chorda dorsalis, or notochord. At the same time there is developed from the outer germ-layer, as its only system of organs, the fundament of the central nervous system. Since these four pro- cesses in the development are in part most intimately involved in one another, they cannot be separated in their treatment. Here again we have to do with a problem which is one of the most difficult in the embryology of vertebrated animal* — the history of the development of the two middle germ-layers. Not- withstanding a voluminous literature which has grown out of this theme, there are many conditions, especially among the higher classes of Vertebrata> which are not yet explained in an entirely satisfactory manner. We shall therefore enter somewhat more minutely into this topic, which, like the question as to the origin of the two primary germ-layers, possesses a fundamental significance for the comprehension of the organisation of Vertebrates. The presentation of what follows will be essentially facilitated, if w^e allow ourselves a short digression into the history of the develop- ment of the Invertebrata, and take under consideration a case in which middle germ-layers and the body-cavity are established in a manner similar to that which obtains in the case of Vertebrata,. but which is easier to investigate arid to understand. Such an * In figs. G6-89 the individual germ-layers are represented in different depth* of shade, so as to make their relations to one another more evident. The middle germ-layer is darkest. DEVELOPMENT OF THE TWO MIDDLE GERM-LAYERS. 107 example is presented to us in the development of arrow-worms (Sagitta) or Chcetognatha, concerning which observations have been published by KOWALEVSKY, BIJTSCHLI, and the author. After the process of cleavage there arises a typical blastula, which after some time is converted into a typical gastrula. While the latter elongates, two folds of the inner germ-layer arise at the bottom of the coalenteron, and grow up parallel to each other (fig. 65). Fig. 65. Fig. 65.— A stage in the development of Sagitta, after KOWALEVSKY, from BALKOUR'S " Comparative Embryology." Optical longitudinal section through a gastrula at the beginning of the formation of the body-cavity. m, Mouth ; al, alimentary cavity ; pv, body-cavity ; bl.p, blastppore. Fig. 66. —Optical cross section through a larva of Sagitta. The coelenteron is separated by means of two folds, which protrude from its ventral wall (F), into the intestinal canal proper and the two lateral body-cavities (lh), all of which are still in communication with one another on the dorsal side (.£>). I}, Dorsal side ; V, ventral side ; ak, outer, it, inner germ-layer ; mkl, parietal, mk", visceral middle layer ; lh, body-cavity. They grow larger and larger, and at the same time stretch over on to the ventral wall of the larva. From here the free edges finally grow on the one hand up to the dorsal wall, on the other up to the blastopore, and thereby completely divide j^ecoalenteroji^ into a middle and two lateral spaces (fig. 66 lh), which for a time commum- t-ate with each other near the blastopore and along the subsequent dorsum (D) of the embryo. After a short time this communication is lost ; the blastopore becomes closed, and the edges of the folds fuse with the adjacent surfaces of the coelenteron. Of tin- tlin-H cavities the middle becomes that of the permanent intestinal tube, the two lateral ones (lh) become those of the two body-cavity sacs which 108 EMBRYOLOGY. separate the intestine from the wall of the body. They appropri- ately take the name enteroccel, since they are formed from the ccelen- teron by a process of constriction, and are genetically distinguishable from other cavities which arise in other animals between the wall of the intestine and that of the body by simple splitting, and to which is given the name fissi 'cod or schizoccel. By the process of infolding the number of the jjg&BLslayer-s in Smjitt.i -has been increased from two to tkree^ The primary inner germ-layer is thereby divided into (1) a cell-layer (ik) which lines the intestinal tube, and (2) a cell-layer which serves to enclose the two body-cavities (mk1 and mk2). The first is designated as the secondary inner germ- layer or entoblast, the second as the middle~~germ-layer (mesoblast). One part of the latter is adjacent to the outer germ-layer, the other part to the intestinal tube ; accordingly the division is carried still further — into a parietal (mk1) and a visceral layer (mk^) of the meso- blast. For the sake of brevity the former may be called the parietal (mk1), the latter the visceral (mk2) middle layer. Conse- quently, one may now speak of two middle .Tig. 67,-Diagrammatic cross sec- germ-layers instead of one, the total number tion through a young Sagitta. - _ iL- while the larva elongates into a worm-like body, "the two body-sacs (fig. 67 Ih) are increased to a greater extent than the intestinal tube (ah) which they embrace. They everywhere crowd the latter away from the wall of the body, grow around it from above and below, where their thin walls come into direct con- tact. By the fusion of the two body-sacs along their surfaces of contact there are formed two delicate membranes, a dorsal (dM) and a ventral (vM) mesentery, by means of which the intestinal tube is attached to the dorsal wall and to the ventral wall of the trunk. Processes very similar to those of Sagitta occur in the development of Vertebrata also, but in the latter case they are combined with the .-!«•%•« •Inpmeiit of the neural tube arid the chorda dorsalis. In tlio presentation of these we shall proceed as in the foregoing chapter, which treated of the formation of the gastrula, and consider separately DEVELOPMENT OF THE TWO MIDDLE OERM LAYERS. the processes in Ampbioxus, Amphibia, Selachians, Birds, and Mam- mals, since they differ somewhat from one another. The history of the development of Amphioxus lanceolatus is very in- structive. The gastrula elongates, whereby the coclenteron is turned a little towards the future dorsal surface, and here terminates in the blastopore, which marks the future hind end of the worm-shaped body. Then the dorsal surface becomes somewhat flattened ; the- cells in this region increase in height, become cylindrical, and form the medullary or neural plate (fig. 69 mp). By a slight infolding of the latter, there arises a medullary groove, which forces downward the roof of the ccelenteron in ik dh tts'"5/l n , ush mi » the form of a ridge (ch). At the place where the thickened medullary plate joins the small-celled part of the outer germ- layer, or the horn-lay er(7i6), an interruption in the continu- ity now takes place, and the epidermis grows over the curved, neural plate from both sides, until its halves meet in the middle line and fuse. Thus there arises along the back of the embryo (fig. 70) a canal, the lower wall of which is formed by the curved medullary plate (mp), and the upper wall by the overgrowing epi- dermis (ak). It is only at a later stage that the medullary plate in Amphioxus, lying under the epidermis, is converted into a neural tube (fig. 72 n) by the bending up of its edges and their fusion. As the fundament of the nervous system becomes differentiated, it extends so far toward the posterior end of the embryo, that the blastopore, which is located there, still falls within its territory, and with the closure of the neural tube is included within the end of the latter Tn this manner it occurs that neural tube and intestinal tube, as- KOWALEVSKY first observed, are now, "By means of the blastopore,. in continuity (fig. 68 en) at the posterior cm I of the body. The two- together constitute a canal composed of two arms, the form of which Fig. 68.— Optical longitudinal [sagittal] section through an embryo of Amphioxus with five primitive segments, after HATSCHEK. V, Anterior, H, posterior end ; ik, inner, mk, middle germ-layer ; dht intestinal cavity ; n, neural tube ; en, neurenteric canal ; us1, first- primitive segment ; ush, cavity of primitive segment. 110 EMBRYOLOGY. is comparable with a siphon. The upper arm, which is the neural tube, continues, for a time, to open to the outside world at its anterior end. The bent por- tion of the siphon, or the blastoporic region, by means of which the neural and the intestinal tube are united, is called canalis neurentericus (fig. 68 en), a structure which we shall again encounter in the development of the re- maining Yertebrata. Simultaneously with the neural tube are developed the two middle germ-layers and the chorda dorsalis (figs. 69 and 70). At the front end of the embryo there arise in the roof of the •ccelenteron close to each other two small evaginations, the body-saQs_ (mk\ which grow dorsally and laterally at either side of the curved medullary groove. These are slowly enlarged, since the process of evagina- tion progresses from the an- terior toward the posterior end of the larva, and finally reaches the blastopore. The narrow strip of the wall of Fig. 69.— Cross section of an Amphioxus embryo, in which the first primitive segment is being formed, after HATSCHEK. ak, Outer, ik, inner, mk, middle germ-layer ; hb, epidermis ; mp, medullary plate ; ch, chorda ; *, evagination of the coelenteron. the coelenteron which is found between them and separating them (its limits marked by two stars * * in figs. 69 and 70), and which lies under the middle of the medullary groove,_represents the funda- ment of the chorda (ch). The primary inner, germ- Fig. 70. — Cross section of an Amphioxus embryo, in which the fifth primitive segment is in process of formation, after HATSCHEK. ak, Outer, ik, inner, mk, middle germ-layer ; mp, medullary plate; ch, chorda; *, evagination of the coelenteron ; dh, intestinal cavity ; Ih, body-cavity. layer therefore tins now r/.ndcryone division into J'onr different parts : (1) thrfnu'lamtnt of the chorif<> tions through I & the primitive * •- groove in the * -| first stages of its .§ development. •ft < - The first shows J o JS us the two lips g | | of the blasto- |g-g pore (fig. 83 ul), % £ .5 separated by a o g -^ small space, 2g§~: into which ^ ** ^ there projects from below a small elevation (dp) of yolk-substance, containing a number of nuclei (merocytes), comparable with the RUSCONIAN yolk-plug in the Amphibian larva (fig. 78 dp). At the lips, the upper germ-layer, a single cell thick, bends around into the lower germ-layer, composed of loosely associated cells. The blastopore leads into the ccelenteron, which lies between yolk and germ-disc. In fig. 84 the margins of the two folds have come into close contact, and have fused to form the anterior part of the primi- tive streak, above which the primitive groove is still to be found. DEVELOPMENT OF THE TWO MIDDLE GERM-LAYERS. 123 When the last remnant of the crescentic groove has been employed tor the elongation of the primitive groove, the margin of the germ- disc, which continues all the time to spread itself out uniformly over the yolk, exhibits everywhere one and the same condition; it has become at all points a circumcrescence-margin, now that the in-_ vagination-margin has detached itself from it as primitive groove. me Fig. 85.— Surface view of the area pellucida in the blastoderm of a Chir.k, soon after the formation of the primitive groove, after BALFOUR. pr, Primitive streak with primitive groove ; a/, amniotic fold. The darker shading suriouudiug the primitive streak indicates the extent of the mesoblast. Fig. 86.— Surface view of the area pellucida of a blastoderm of 18 hours, after BALFOUR. The area opaca is omitted ; the pear-shaped outline marks the Jimit of the area pellucida. At the place where the two medullary folds are continuous with each other there is to be seen a short curved line, which represents the head-fold. In front of it there lies a second line concentric with it, the beginning of the amniotic fold. A, Medullary folds ; me, medullary furrow ; pr, primitive groove. When subsequently the pellucid and opaque areas become more dis- tinctly separated, the primitive groove comes to lie in the posterior part of the pellucid area. By careful examination of a surface pre- paration (figs. 85 and 86 pr), one sees that it is bounded, both on the right side and on the left, by two small folds, which are derived from the blastoporic lips, and which appear darker and more opaque because the cells are multiplying rapidly and are more closely crowded. Since the two primitive folds, or the two blastoporic lips, 124 EMBRYOLOGY. are closely in contact at the bottom of the groove, and indeed are in places completely fused, they together produce in the pellucid area a dark streak of sub- stance, which is about a millimetre long and 0'2 mm. broad. With the earlier embryologists, to whom it was already known, we designate this as the primitive streak of the germ- disc. In the vicinity of the primitive streak there are to be distinguished in surface views, now and during the following stages of development, some additional changes, which are caused by the beginnings of special or- gans. In the first place, there is to be seen in the anterior region of the area pellucida, and in the direct continuation of the primitive streak, a narrow, dark streak of cells, which has been designated by KOLLIKER as the head-process of the primitive streak, and which gradually in- creases in length. Se- condly, there appears an increasing opacity (fig. 85) in the vicinity of the primitive streak and its head -process, which afterward stretches Fig. 87.— Blastoderm of the Chick, incubated 33 hours, after DUVAL. The area pellucidu (/r) this goes over continuously into the outer germ-layer, the cells of which are here found in prolifera- tion, whereas its lateral wings are separated from the outer layer by a fissure. The lower germ-layer is drawn by ROLLER — from whose work the accompanying figure is taken — as being everywhere a ak mk — Fig. 97. — Cross section through the embryonic area of a Mole, which is in a stage corresponding approximately with that of the Rabbit represented in Fig 89 8. After HEAPE. The section passes through the primitive groove, somewhat behind the one represented in Fig. 94. ak, Outer, ik, inner, ink, middle germ-layer ; u, primitive groove. separate sheet of flattened cells. It is clear, however, from other drawings and descriptions by DUVAL, RAJJL, and others, as well as from the accounts in re gard to the similar development of Reptiles, that for a certain distance underneath the primitive groove the middle germ-layer is as little to be distinguished as a separate strucLure from the lower as it is from the upper germ-layer. Cross feections through the primitive groove of mammalian embryos are very instructive (tig. 97). According to HEAPE'S inves- tigations on the Mole, the groove (u) cuts deeply into a mass of small cells. At this place all three layers are fused together ; and it is only laterally to this that they are separated by means of a distinct fissure, and that each is distirguishable by its character- istic kind of cells — the outer (ak) by its tall, the inner (ik) by its much-flattened, and the middle (mk) by its small, more spherical or polygonal cells. The conditions of the germ-disc of the Rabbit found by VAN BENEDEN are especially distinct (fig. 98). At the deep incision 134 EMBRYOLOGY. of the primitive groove (pr) all three germ-layers are joined to one another for a certain distance by nuans of a common cel^ ink* ink1 pr ul Fig. 98.— Cross section through the primitive groove (blastopore) of a Rabbit's germ-disc, after ED. VAN BENEDEN. ak, Outer, ik, inner, mk, middle germ -layer ; ink1, parietal, mk2, visceral lamella of the middle germ-layer ; ul, lateral lip of the blastopore ; pr, primitive groove. mass. At the same time one may observe, with tolerable dis- tinctness, how the outer germ-layer (ak) bends around into the parietal middle layer (mk1) at the primitive fold (ul), while the visceral lamella (mk2) is continuous with the entoderm (ik), which is only one cell thick. Indeed, in embryos of Rabbits and Bats, VAN BENEDEN in some cases observed between the primitive folds, or mk1 ul Fig 99. — Cross section through a human germ-disc, with open medullary groove, in the vicinity of the neurenteric canal (pr), after GRAF SPEE. ak, Outer, ik, inner germ-layer ; mk1, parietal, mkz, visceral lamella of the middle germ-layer ; ul, lateral lip of the blastopore ; pr, primitive groove. blastoporic lips, a structure corresponding to the yolk-plug of Amphibia. It is certainly of great general interest that the investigation of an extraordinarily young human germ-disc at the hands of GRAF SPEE has furnished a cross section (fig. 99) which is near enough DEVELOPMENT OF THE TWO MIDDLE GERM-LAYERS. 135 like the one of the Rabbit here figured to be mistaken for it. In the case of the human embryo, one sees a deep-cutting primitive groove, and at the easily recognisable blastoporic lip (ul) the bend- ing over of the outer germ-layer (ak) into the parietal lamella (mkl). The visceral lamella (mk2) is well separated from the latter for some distance; under the primitive groove it is merged with the inner germ-layer, the edges of the potential folds of the two sides being fused into a mass of cells, which forms the floor of the primitive groove. Finally an agreement with the development of the Amphibia is not wanting in sections which are made through the embryonic areas of Birds, Reptiles, and Mammals behind the primitive groove. The middle germ-layer begins to spread itself out backward also, not, however, as in the anterior part of the embryonic area, in the form of paired fundaments, but rather as a single continuous cell-mass. This outgrowth too is united to the two primary germ-layers only in the region of the posterior end of the primi- tive streak, being elsewhere distinctly separated from both of them. For the completion of the previous account, some statements about the further growth of the middle germ-layer may now be added, concerning which cross sections through embryos of various ages afford evidence. The middle germ-layer spreads itself out on all sides between the two primary germ-layers, farther and farther from the place of its first formation — the vicinity of the primitive groove. At first it is limited to the fundament of the embryo itself, then it makes its way into the area pellucida, and, finally, it is encountered in the opaque area. Everywhere and constantly in its extension it appears as an entirely independent layer, at least two cells thick, which is separated from its surround- ings by fissures. It is found to be united for a short distance with the inner and outer germ -layers, but only at the primitive groove^ which persists for a long time, — in older embryos even, — as we have already learned from surface-views. Even in the stage when the neurenteric canal traverses the primitive streak, and puts the coelenteric cavity (under the entoderm, fig. 100 hy} in communication with the neural tube, we see the cellular lining of the canal and the middle germ-layer fused, so that in this region a connection still exists between all three germinal layers. Compare the accompany- ing cross sections through embryos of Lacerta muralis. After the statement of the actual conditions, the questions remain EMBRYOLOGY. t ) be answered : (1) What is the meaning of the primitive groove ? (2) How is the middle germ-layer developed ? - In the interpretation of the primitive groove I place myself, as is to be seen from what precedes, wholly on the side of those investi- gators who, like BALFOUR, HATSCHEK, KUPFFER, HOFFMANN, VAN BENEDEN, L. GERLACH, RtrcKERT, and others, recognise in it a structure equivalent to, but somewhat modi- fied from, the blastopore of lower Vertebrates, and who compare the primitive, folds to lateral bias to- porip lips closely pressed together. In my description of a previous stage I have already designated as blastopore the crescentic " (fig. 52 B s) (fig. 55 u) anep groove of Birds and the prostoma of Reptiles, because that is the place where the lower germ-layer is infolded. In my opinion both grooves are identical structures, which, by changes in position and form, have been so evolved, the one from the other, that the fissure, which was at first trans- verse, has become converted into a longitudinal one. For Reptiles KUPFFER has established this to a certainty. According to his figures in Emys Europsea, e.g., the transverse depression (u) represented in fig. 101 A is converted at a later stage into the form shown in the adjacent figure (101 B u). For the Birds the investigations of DUVAL previously recounted (p. 121, fig. 82) are convincing. There is also to be taken into account- the additional fact, that even as early as in the AmphiDia an exactly corresponclir pore takes place. Fig. 100.— Cross sections through the posterior end of a young embryo of Lacerta muralis, after BALFOUR. In ngure A the neurenteric canal is cut length- wise ; in figure B only an evagination of it, which is directed backward. Since the sections probably have not cut the chief axis of the embryo perpendicularly, the middle germ-layer is fused with the wall of the canal only on the right side in figure A, whereas in figure B the connection is present on both sides. t«, Neurenteric cana ; ep, outer, mep, middle, hy, lower germ-layer. metamorphosis of the blasto- As the accompanying cuts (fig. 101 C and /)) show, the blastopore of the Amphibian is, at its first appearance, a transverse fissure (fig. 101 C u). Then it becomes circular, and embraces with its lips a protruding portion of the otherwise enclosed yolk-mass, — the yolk-plug, — becomes narrower, and is continued forward into a longitudinal groove. Finally it appears (fig. 101 D u) as a deep groove* situated at the end of the DEVELOPMENT OF THE TWO MIDDLE GERM-LAYERS. 137 medullary furrow, with its small circular opening filled up with a yolk-plug. In addition there are three important considerations which may be urged in support of the interpretation of the primitive groove as blastopore. First, the primitive streak, even when an open canal is wanting, is the only place in the whole germ-disc where a connection between Fig. 101. A and B . — a. portion of a yovnTer and of an older embryonic fundament of Emya Europsea, with the prostoma or blastopors («), after KUPFFER. •ill, Lip of the blastopore. C and D. — Two eggs of Triton tseniatus seen from the blastopore, one 30 hours, the other 53 hours after artificial fertilisation. «, Blastopore ; h, elevation between blastopore and dorsal groove ; /, semicircular furrow, which encloses the blastoporic area ; dp, yolk-plug. Jill the germ-layers is constantly present, as at the Amphibian blastopore. Secondly, the chief organs of the body, such as the chorda, the neural tube, and the primitive segments, are developed in front of the primitive streak in the case of the higher Vertebrates, just as they arise in front of the blastopore in Amphioxus and the Amphibia. Both blastopore and primitive streak occupy the posterior end of the body. The so-called cephalic process of the primitive streak is nothing else than the first rudiment of the chorda. Thirdly, one may still recognise in the openings — canales neu- renterici — which have been pointed out in the primitive streak at an earlier or later stage in its development, in the case of Birds, Reptiles, and Mammals, an indication that an open communication has 138 EMBRYOLOGY. existed here from the beginning between the inner and the outer germ-layers; further, that this communication has disappeared through the fusion of the blastoporic lips, but that it can be in part reestablished in consequence of more favorable processes of growth. At the same time the neurenteric canal, in cases where it reappears in the primitive streak, effects a very characteristic union between the posterior ends of the neural and intestinal tubes, in exactly the same manner in which the blastopore of Amphioxus, the Amphibia, and the Selachii does (compare fig. 80 with fig. 88 n.e). In the interpretation of the primitive groove as blastopore I am compelled to oppose a somewhat different view. Certain investi- gators (BALFOUR, RAUBER, and others) recognise in the primitive groove and the crescentic groove of meroblastic eggs only a small part of the blastopore ; they interpret as the major part of it the region which is encircled by the whole rim of the germ-disc and is occupied by the yolk-mass, and to which they give the name yolk- blastopore.* According to their conception, as also according to the original assumption of HAECKEL. the two-layered germ-disc is a flattened-out gastrula, — its blastoporic rim lying upon the yolk- sphere, — which gradually grows around the yolk, and finally takes the latter wholly inside itself, just as if it were a ball of food. The primitive groove is a nmall detached part of the blastopore, which is connected with the development of the middle germ-layer. The two parts become completely separated from each other, and are closed at different times, each for itself, the yolk-blastopore often late, at the pole of the yolk-sac which is opposite to the embryo. , Such an assumption of a double blastopore appears to me to be untenable. / propose that only that place of the germ be designated as blastopore at ivhich, as in the gastrulation of Amphioxus and the Amphibia, there actually occurs an invagination of cells, by means of. which the cleavage-cavity is obliterated. Such a process takes place in the Selachii only at the crescentic hinder pjirt of the margin of the germ-disc, in the Reptiles and Birds at the small place designated as crescentic groove. It is also from this place alone that subse- quently the development of the middle germ-layer proceeds. The anterior margin of the germ-disc in Selachians, and, after the conversion of the crescentic groove into the primitive groove, the wfiote~ * KAUBER has suggested for the various regions which he assumes for the blastopore the designations prostoma sulcatum longitudinal* (primitive groove), prostoma aulcatum falciforme (crescentic groove), and pro&toma marginale (yolk-blastopore). DEVELOPMENT OF MME TWO MIDDLE GERM-LAYERS. 139' margin of the germ-disc in Birds and Reptiles, have an entirely dif- ferent signification. This margin exhibits a very different relationship from that of the primitive streak or blastopore ; it is a peculiarity of meroblastic eggs, which is most intimately associated with the origin of partial cleavage. Tt indicates tin- place at which the segmented portion of the germ meets the unsegmented portion- — the place at which there lie in the yolk free nuclei, by means of which a supple- mentary cleavage is kept up until late stages in the process of development, until, in fact, the time when the two primary germ- layers have been formed by means of the invagination which -occurs at the blastopore. At the expense of the cell-material, which is constantly being augmented by supplementary cleavage, the germ- layers increase in extent at their place of transition into the yolk, and thus gradually grow over the unsegmented part. Whereas at ' the blastopore an invagination of cells already present takes place, there ensues at the margin of the germ- disc a formation of new cells, and thereby an increase of the marginal part and an overgrowth of the yolk. I therefore propose for it the name circumcrescence-margin of the yolk-sphere. There can be no such thing as a separate opening or a yolk-blast opore, because the yolk is an organic part of the germ, and is in continuity with the segmented part of it by means of the layer which contains the yolk- nuclei. If we would insti- tute a comparison be- tween animals with meroblastic eggs and the Amphibia at a stage when gastrulation is not yet completed, then the blastopore of the Amphibia, which is indicated by the letter u in the accompanying section through the gastrula of a Triton (fig. 102), corresponds to the prostoma of Rep- tiles, and to the crescentic and primitive grooves of Birds ; the still exposed mass of yolk-cells corresponds to the yolk-material which is- Fig. 102. —Longitudinal section through a gastrula of Triton. ak. Outer, ik, inner germ-layer ;fh, cleavage-cavity ; ud, coel- enteron ; u, blastopore ; dz, yolk-cells ; dl, dorsal, vl, ventral lip of the coelenteron. 140 EMBRYOLOGY. not yet overgrown by germ-layers ; the place marked by a star, at which in the Amphibia the transition from the small-celled layer to the mass of yolk-cells occurs, or the marginal zone of GOETTE, is •comparable to the margin of circumcrescence in meroblastic eggs. In the second place, the question arises : How is the middle genn- layer of Vertebrates developed ? The answer is : By a prpcessof folding similar to that in the case of Amphioxus lanceolatus. This answer is substantiated by the fact that the individual processes in the development of the middle germ-layer may be correlated with corresponding processes in Amphioxus. In view of the fundamental importance of the matter, I formulate in a synoptic and precise manner in six paragraphs the points in reference to which it has been possible to establish an agreement in all Vertebrates. 1. Before the chorda is formed, the germ in all Vertebrates is composed of two layers in the region of a median streak which lies in front of the blastopore and primitive groove. It is here composed of the medullary plate and the fundament of the chorda, which then shares in bounding the intestinal cavity. 2. At both sides of this median streak the germ is 'three-layered, if we regard the middle germ-layer as a single one ; it i$ four-layered, if we allow that the latter consists of a parietal and a "visceral cell- layer, which are originally pressed firmly together, and only later actually separated by the appearance of the body-cavity. 3. In no Vertebrate do the middle ' germ-layers arise by fission, either from the outer or the inner germ-layers, because they are -everywhere, except in a very limited region of the germ, sharply separated from both by means of a fissure. 4. A connection of the middle germ-layers with the neighbouring cell-layers takes place only : (a) at the blastopore or primitive groove, where all four (or three) germ-layers are joined together, and (b) at both sides of the fundament of the chorda. 5. One observes the first fundament of the middle germ-layers at the region of the germ just mentioned, and sees it spread itself out from here — i.e., from the periphery of the blastopore or the primitive groove, and from both sides of the fundament of the chorda — forward, backward, and ventrad or laterad. In front of the blastopore it appears in the form of paired fundaments separated by the fundament of the chorda; behind the blastopore, on the contrary, -as a continuous structure. 6. While the chorda is being developed, the two paired fundaments DEVELOPMENT OF THE TWO MIDDLE GERM-LAYERS. 141 of the middle germ-layers detach themselves from the adjacent cell- layers at the sides where their ingrowth took place, and at the same time the halves of the permanent entoderm grow together, whereby the dorsal closure of the intestine is effected. In view of these facts there is only one explanation at which we can arrive. If it is certain that the middle germ-layers do not arise by a fission in loco from either of the primary germ-layers,. then their gradual spreading out from a definite region of the germ can result only from an ingrowth of cells, which occurs from those places where a connection with other cell-layers has been demon- strated. The middle germ-layers draw the principal material for their growth from cells which, at the blastopore or at the primitive groove, migrate between the two primary germ-layers. But this immigration of cells may be interpreted as a process of infolding of the primary germ-layers, as in the case of Amphioxus. In the method of the infolding there exists, it is true, one very striking and apparently important difference between Amphioxus and the remaining Vertebrates. In Amphioxus the middle germ- layer arises as a hollow sac, by means of the folding of the inner germ-layer — in the remaining Vertebrates as a solid mass of cells. This undeniable difference is, however, easily explained in the following manner : In the solid fundaments of the middle germ- layer a cavity is wanting, because the cellular walls of the sac are from the beginning firmly pressed together, in consequence of the yolk-mass which fills the crelenteron. In addition to other striking agreements with the conditions in Amphioxus lanceolatus, there are three points of view which in particular com mend this interpretation :- — (1) In all vertebrated animals there early arises in the middle germ-layer a fissure, which is surrounded by cells, often cubical or cylindrical, having an epithelial arrangement. The parietal and visceral layers then take the form of epithelial lamellae, as is to be seen in an especially striking manner in the case of the Selachii at a very eauly stage of development. (2) From these epithelial layers there arise in the adult genuine epithelial membranes, like the ciliated peritoneal epithelium of many Vertebrates, and, in addition,. glands that in many respects resemble the glands derived from epithelial membranes [of the other germ-layers] (kidney, testis, ovary). (3) The election that the middle germ-layer of Verte- brates arises as a single cell-mass, and therefore cannot be equi- valent to two layers of epithelium, loses its weight with every one who knows the numerous analogous phenomena of development 142 EMBRYOLOGY. occurring elsewhere, in which organs that should be hollow are at first developed as solid masses of cells. We shall hereafter cite as such the solid fundament of the neural tube in Bony Fishes, many sensory organs and the most of the glandular sacs, which latter arise as solid buds of epithelial lamellae, and only later, when they become functionally active, acquire a cavity by the separation of their cells. SUMMARY. A . The Uastula. 1. Out of the mass of cleavage-cells (morula) there is developed in all Vertebrates a sac-like germ (blastula) with cleavage-cavity. 2. There are four different kinds of blastulse in Vertebrates, .according to the amount and distribution of yolk. (a) In Amphioxus the cleavage-cavity is very large, and its wall consists of a single layer of cylindrical cells of nearly uniform size. (b) In Cyclostomes and Amphibia the cleavage-cavity is small : one half of the wall of the blastula is thin, and composed of one or several layers of small cells ; the other half is considerably thickened, and formed of large yolk-cells arranged in many superposed layers. {c) In Fishes, Reptiles, and Birds (meroblastic eggs) the cleavage-cavity is small and fissure-like or wanting. Only its roof or dorsal wall consists of cells (germ-disc) ; its floor or ventral wall, on the contrary, consists of the yolk-mass which has not been divided into cells, but which contains yolk-nuclei in the vicinity of the margin of the germ-disc. (d) In Mammals the cleavage-cavity is very spacious, and filled with an albuminous fluid ; its wall is composed of a single layer of greatly flattened hexagonal cells, with the exception of a small thickened place, where larger cells in several superposed layers cause an elevation which projects into the cavity. B. The cup-shaped larva or gastrula with two germ-layers. 1. There ts formed out of the blastula, by the invaginatioh of a portion of its surface, a two-layered form, the beaker-larva or gastrula. 2. The two layers of the double beaker are the outer and the DEVELOPMENT OF THE TWO MIDDLE GERM-LAYERS. 143 inner germ-layer (ectoblast, entoblast) ; the fissure separating the two layers is the obliterated cleavage-cavity; the cavity resulting from the invagination is the coelenteron, its external opening the primitive mouth (blastopore, prostoma, crescentic groove, primitive groove). 3. The four kinds of gastrulse correspond to the four kinds of blastulse. (a) In Amphioxus the co3lenteron is wide, and each germ- layer is made up of a single sheet of cylindrical cells. (b) In Cyclostornes and Amphibia the mass of yolk-cells is accumulated on the ventral wall of the co3lenteron in the inner germ layer, and causes a protuberance, by means of which the coelenteron is reduced to a fissure. (c) In Pishes, Reptiles, and Birds the process of invagination remains confined to the germ-disc, since the unsegmented yolk, on account of its considerable volume, cannot be made to share in the invagination. The germ-disc becomes two-layered by means of an ingrowth of cells at the crescentic groove (blastopore). The yolk acquires a cellular boundary very slowly and at a late period ; it is over-grown by the margin of the germ-disc, when the supplementary cleavage (yolk-nuclei) takes place. The outer germ -layer spreads itself out and envelops the yolk most rapidly ; then follows the inner, and finally the middle layer. (d) In Mammals the inner germ-layer is developed from the thickened region of the blastula, probably by means of an invagination, because at a later stage an orifice of invagination, comparable with the primitive groove of Birds, or a blastopore, can be demonstrated. At the beginning of its development the inner germ-layer terminates below in a free margin, so that the coelen- teron is for a time closed in on the ventral side by the o Liter germ-layer only, a peculiarity which is comparable with the conditions in Reptiles and Birds, if we conceive the yolk-material to have disappeared in this instance before it is completely surrounded by the inner germ- layer. 4. In Vertebrates the gastrula presents a sharply expressed trilateral symmetry, so that one can easil distinguish the future 144 EMBRYOLOGY. head- and tail-ends, the future dorsal and ventral sides of the body. The blastopore (crescentic groove, primitive groove) marks tha posterior end. The ventral side is characterised by being the place where the segmented or unsegmented yolk-material comes to lie. C. 'The embryo with four germ-layers and a body-cavity. 1. In all Vertebrates there are formed from the roof of the- ccelenteron two lateral evaginations of the inner germ-layer, by means of which the ccelenteron is divided into a median cavity, the secondary intestine, and two lateral cavities, the two body-sacs. 2. The primary inner germ-layer is resolved in consequence of this process of evagination into three parts : — First, the epithelial lining of the intestinal tube (secondary inner germ-layer — Darmdriisenblatt). Secondly, the epithelial lining of the body-cavity, or the middle germ-layer, in which a parietal and a visceral layer ara distinguishable. Thirdly, the chorda, which takes its origin from the portion of the primary inner germ-layer which lies between the lateral evaginations from the roof of the coelenteron. 3. Two modifications of the process of evagination can be recog- nised in the case of Vertebrates. (a) In Amphioxus the evaginations are small, numerous, and segmentally arranged; provided from the first with a cavity ; and, beginning in the fundus of the ccelenteron,. developed toward the blastopore. (b) In the remaining Vertebrates, instead of hollow sacs, there- grow out from the inner germ-layer two solid masses of cells : — (1) In the vicinity of the blastopore (primitive groove, peristomal mesoblast). (2) From here forward along the roof of the coelenteron, at a slight distance from the median plane, at both sides of the fundament of the chorda (gastral mesoblast). The paired fundaments spread themselves out from their place of origin between the two primary germ- layers farther forward and ventralward. 4. The three organs derived from the primary inner germ-layer- (middle germ-layer, fundament of the chorda, secondary inner germ- layer) are separated from one another by constrictions. HISTORY OF THE GERM-LAYER THEORY. 145 First, the body-sacs are detached from the fundament of the chorda and the entoblast, whereupon the edges of the parietal and visceral lamellae, thus set free, fuse with each other. Secondly, the fundament of the chorda is bent into a chordal groove, and this is converted into a solid rod, which is completely isolated from the entoblast. Thirdly, the entoblast closes together into a tube with a dorsal raphe. 5. The development of the three fundaments, as also that of various other organs, begins at the head-end of the embryo, and advances from here toward the blastopore, where for a long time a continual formation of new parts and an increase in the longitudinal growth of the body take place. 6. During the development of the middle germ-layer, the blasto- pore of the Amphibians, Fishes, Reptiles, Birds, and Mammals has been metamorphosed into a groove occupying the longitudinal axis of the embryo (primitive groove of the higher Vertebrates). 7. The blastopore and the primitive groove in later stages of development undergo degeneration, and are not converted into any organ of the adult. (For the details of this, see Part II.) 8. Before their disappearance the blastopore and primitive groove are surrounded by the medullary folds and taken into the terminal part of the neural tube, whereby a direct communication between neural tube and intestinal tube — the neurenteric canal — is effected. The two organs, which communicate with each other for a long time, are later separated by its closure. CHAPTER Til. HISTORY OF THE GERM-LAYER THEORY. THE fundamental facts of the sheet-like structure of the vertebrate body, which have been treated of in the two preceding chapters, are epitomised as the doctrine of the germ-layers, or the germ-layer tneory. Since this theory is of the most far-reaching significance for the comprehension of the evolution of form in animals, and can be placed side by side with the cell-theory as coequal with the latter, I devote a separate chapter to its history. 10 146 EMBRYOLOGY. The very earliest establishment of the germ-layer theory is asso- ciated with the most celebrated names in the field of embryology : CASPAR FRIEDRICH WOLFF, PANDER, and CARL ERNST VON BAER. CASPAR FRIEDRICH WOLFF, the discoverer of the metamorphosis of plants, who, even before GOETTE, had clearly and distinctly stated that the various organs of the plant, as, for example, the separate parts of the flower, have been developed by various modifications of leaf-like fundaments, also established the metamorphosis of animals, for which he endeavoured to found a similar law of development. He showed in his important work on the formation of the intestinal canal of the Chick, that it originally appeared in the egg as a leaf-like structure, and that this afterwards became folded into a groove, and finally converted into a tube. He conjectured that the remaining systems of organs might arise in a similar way, and appended to the account of the development of the intestinal canal the significant assertion : " It appears as though at different periods, and many times in succession, various systems might become formed after one and the same type, and as if they might be on that account similar to one another, even though they are in reality different. The system which is first produced, which is first to take on a specific form, is the nervous system. When this is concluded, then the fleshy mass, which really makes up the embryo, is formed after the same type ; then appears a third, the vascular system, which certainly ... is not so unlike the first ones that the form described as common to all systems could not be easily recognised in it. After this follows the fourth, the intestinal canal, which, again, is formed after the same type, and appears as a com- pleted independent whole, similar to the first three." WOLFF'S article, written in Latin, made no impression on his contemporaries ; it had to be rescued from oblivion by M ECKEL, who published a German translation of it in 1812. It was probably by means of this translation that the attention of PANDER was directed to WOLFF. PANDER, under the stimulus and direction of his celebrated teacher, DOLLINGER, further developed the doctrine, the germ of which was contained in WOLFF'S paper. In his publication, " Beitrage zur Entwicklung des Hiihnchens im Ei," issued in the year 1817, PANDER distinguished in the blasto- derm, as early as the twelfth hour of incubation, two thin separable lamellas as the serous layer and the mucous layer, and main- tained that subsequently a third, the vascular layer, was developed between them. " Whatever noteworthy may subsequently occur,' HISTORY OF THE GERM -LAYER THEORY. 147 he remarks, "it is never to be regarded as anything else than a metamorphosis of the blastoderm and its layers, endowed as they are -with an inexhaustible store of formative energy." A few years later the germ-layer theory reached at the hands of CARL ERNST VON BAER a preliminary completion, which served for some time. VON BAER, likewise a pupil of DOLLINGER, had observed in Wiirzburg the beginning of the investigations of his young friend, PANDER. In laborious studies pursued for many years, BAER followed with wonderful accuracy the origin of the germ-layers and their meta- morphosis into the individual organs of the adult body, principally in the case of the Chick, but also in the case of some other Vertebrates, and recorded his investigations in his classical work, " Ueber Entwick- lungsgeschichte der Thiere, Beobachtung und Reflexion," which is unsurpassable both in observations and in its general standpoints. BAER differs from PANDER in maintaining that each of the two primary germ-layers, which he distinguishes as animal and vegetative, subsequently divides into two sheets. The animal germ-layer divides itself into dermal lamella and sarcous lamella (Hautschicht, Fleischschicht), the vegetative into mucous lamella, and vascular lamella, so that now four secondary germ-layers have arisen. The individual organs are developed out of the germ-layers by morphological and histological differentiation. A further advance beyond that of BAER could not be attained until, with the establishment of the cell-theory, entirely new points of view were introduced into morphology and, with improved con- struction in microscopes, methods of investigation were refined. It is chiefly REMAK and KOLLIKER who have promoted the germ- layer theory in this direction. REMAK took in hand successfully in his noted investigations on the development of Vertebrates the very important question, how the originally similar cells of the germ-layers are related to the tissues of the completed organs. He showed that out of the lowest of the four germ-layers there proceed only the epithelial and glan- dular cells of the intestinal tube and its appendages, that from the uppermost layer the epithelial cells of the epidermis, the sensory organs, and the nervous tissue arise, whereas the two middle layers furnish the mechanically sustentative substances arid the blood, tho muscular tissue, and the urinary and sexual organs. In regard to the manner in which the four secondary germ-layers arise, REMAK differs from BAER. Out of the two primary germ- layers he first makes a third one, the middle germ-layer, arise, and 148 EMBRYOLOGY. indeed he derives it exclusively from the lower germ-layer by a process of fission. He designates the three layers as the upper or sensorial, the middle or motor-germinative, and the lower or trophic. The four secondary germ-layers of VON BAER come into existence subsequently by a repetition of the fission, whereby the middle germ- layer is split, at least in its lateral portions (lateral plates), into the dermo-fibrous layer and the intestine-fibrous layer (Hautfaser- und Darmfaserblatt), between which arise the thoracic and body-cavities. EEMAK in his account approximates the true state of affairs, as detailed in the preceding chapters, more nearly than VON BAER ; however, both made the same mistake of interpreting the formation of the germ-layers as always a process of disassociation or fission. That is also the rock on which were wrecked the researches of numer- ous other investigators, who in the decennary succeeding REMAK dealt with the important question of the origin of the germ-layers. It was difficult to decide this question for the higher VertebratesT which have been most frequently investigated ; so that very contra- dictory opinions were expressed relative to the development of the middle layer — whether it was exclusively from the lower (REMAK),. exclusively from the upper, or from both layers. This question could be clearly understood only upon the establish- ment of new general standpoints. These could be acquired only by the comparative method, and by the study of lower Vertebrates and the Invertebrates. Two fundamental ^ocesses needed to be better comprehended."— (1) How are the two primary germ-layers developed ? (2) How are the two middle germ-layers developed ? By means of the comparative developmental method, one question has been brought nearer to a solution in the gastrcea-theory, the other in the ccdom-theory. In the study of the first problem, which was the earlier solvedr HUXLEY and KOWALEVSKY, HAECKEL and RAY LANKESTER, have shown especial merit. They demonstrated, partly through anato- mical, partly through embryological studies, that, with the exception cf the Protozoa, the body of every invertebrated animal is constructed of layers, which may be compared with the primary germ-layers of Vertebrates. The highly gifted English zoologist HUXLEY distinguished as early as the year 1849 two membranes in the Medusae, an outer and an iimer layer, out of which alone their bodies are constructed; and at the same time expressed the happy idea that physiologically they HISTORY OF THE GERM-LAYER THEORY. 149 were equivalent to the serous and the mucous layers of BAER. Soon after this (1853) ALLMAN introduced for the layers of the -Ooelenterates the names, which are now so much employed, ectoderm and entoderm; subsequently use was also made of these for designat- ing the embryonic layers. The germ-layer theory was promoted to a still greater degree by the Russian zoologist KOWALEVSKY, who made us acquainted in numerous excellent detailed investigations with a profusion of important facts concerning the embryology of Worms, Crelenterates, Molluscs, Brachiopods, Tunicates, and Arthropods. He produced evidence that in all the Invertebrates which he investigated two germ-layers are formed at the beginning of development, and that in almost all cases, when the process of cleavage is at an end, a cellular sac arises, and that this, by the infolding of a part of the wall, becomes converted into a double cup, the cavity of which, enclosed by two germ-layers, communicates with the outside by means of an opening. He succeeded in establishing the existence •of this very important cup-shaped larva (gastrula) in many branches of the animal kingdom. In this connection should be mentioned the services of several other embryologists, who at a still earlier period had observed in isolated cases the cup-shaped larva and its origin by means of invagination. EUSCONI and REMAK had described the cup-shaped larva of Amphibia, GEGENBAUR that of the Sagittae or arrow-worms-, MAX SCHULTZE that of Petromyzon. Whereas KOWALEVSKY by his series of investigations enriched our knowledge of material facts, HAECKEL first sought to utilise the same for a general theory, since by the process of morphological •comparison he brought into association hitherto disconnected obser- vations. Starting from the development and the anatomy of the Sponges, he compared the layer-like structure of the embryos of all animals with the layer-like structure of the Coelenterates, and pro- duced as the fruit of this study the celebrated gastrcea-theory, which, attacked on many sides at the time of its publication, has now "found in its essential substance general acceptance, and has given the impetus to numerous investigations. HAECKEL showed that in the development of the various classes of animals from the Sponges up to Man a single form of the germ makes its appearance, the gastrula, which consists of two cell- layers, and that the two cell-layers of the various embryonic forms are comparable to one anotner or .homologous. The gastrula in its simplest condition presents, as 150 EMBRYOLOGY. he endeavored to establish, the form of a double cup with » coelenteric cavity and a primitive mouth, but may be greatly altered, as in the most of the Vertebrates, by the deposition of yolk-material in the egg, so that the original fundamental form is scarcely recognisable. Consequently he distinguished, according to- the kind of modification, different forms of the gastrula, as bell- shaped, cap-shaped, disc-shaped, and vesicular yastrulce. He made the various forms arise by a process of invagination from a still simpler fundamental form, the blastula, which is the final result of the cleavage process.* HAECKEL published his excellent gastraea-theory in two articles in iheJenaischeZeitsckrift: (1) " Die GastraBatheorie, die phylogenetische- Classification des Thierreichs, und die Homologie der Keimblatter," (2) " Nachtrage zur Gastrseatheorie." At the same time with HAECKEL, RAY LANKESTER in England was led to a similar theory, which he had worked out in a paper full of new ideas : " On the Primitive Cell-layers of the Embryo as the Basis of Genealogical Classification of Animals." Both HAECKEL and LANKESTER failed to point out how the forma- tion of the gastrula takes place in some of the divisions of Verte- brates— in Fishes, Reptiles, Birds, and Mammals. Essential service- in the establishment and explanation of numerous questions of detail, which remained unsettled in the gastrsea-theory, has been rendered by BALFOUR, VAN BENEDEN, GERLACH, GOETTE, HOFFMANN, ROLLER,. RAUBER, RIJCKERT, SELENKA, DUVAL, and others. Thus through HAECKEL'S gastrsea-theory the following points were gradually cleared up : (1) The two primary germ-layers, which form' the foundation for the development of both Invertebrates and * It should be here stated that even OKEN and C. ERNST v. BAER had set forth, although in a very indefinite manner, the importance of the vesicular form for the development of the animal body. OKEN was an opponent of the germ-layer theory of WOLFF. In a criticism of PANDER'S investigations he exclaimed with emphasis and a certain justice : " The facts cannot be so. The body arises out of vesicles and never out of layers," and he added the very pertinent remark : " It appears to me as if it had been entirely forgotten that the yolk and the yolk-membrane, which is a vesicle, belong essentially to the, body of the germ ; that tbe embryo does not swim upon it like a fish in the water, nor lie upon it like a funnel on a cask." In a similar manner BAER remarks, but without further expounding the relation to the germ-layers : " Since the germ is the undeveloped animal itself^, one can affirm, not without reason, that the simple vesicular form is the common fundamental form, out of which all animals are developed, not only ideally, but historically." HISTORY OF THE GERM-LAYER THEORY. 151 Vertebrates, arise, not through disassociation or fission, but through infolding of an originally simple cell-layer.* (2) These are com- parable with one another or homologous, because they are developed accoiding to the same process, and because the two fundamental organs of the body, the layer which limits the body externally (the ectoderm) and the layer which lines the digestive cavity (the entoderm), arise from them. (3) The intestinal canal of all animals arises by invagination. In the question as to the development of the middle germ-layer HAECKEL remained at the traditional standpoint, and inclined most to C. E. VON BAER'S view that the parietal lamella arose by fission from the outer primary layer., and the visceral lamella from the inner germ-layer. Most embryologists, who worked on the develop- ment of Vertebrates, entertained, on the contrary, KEMAK'S view, and made the whole middle germ-layer arise from the inner by fission. They regarded the body-cavity as a fissure in the middle germ- layer, and compared it with other lymphatic spaces, such as occur in the connective tissue at various places in the body. The correction of this view was undertaken by various persons in the same manner as in the case of the primary germ-layers. By detailed study of the formation of the germ-layers in the Chick and Mammals, KOLLIKER found that the middle germ-layer did not simply split itself off from the inner, but that it arose from a limited region of the blastoderm, namely, from the primitive groove, where the two primary germ -layers are continuous. He maintained that from this region it grew out between the two primary germ-layers as a solid cell-mass, and that subsequently the body-cavity appeared in it by means of its fission into two layers. This was an essential advance in the representation of the actual state of affairs. But a deeper insight into these embryonic processes in Vertebrates was first acquired in this case also through the study of Invertebrates, especially through the important discoveries of METSCHNIKOFF and KOWALEVSKY concerning the formation of the body-cavity in Echino- derms, Balanoglossus, Chsetognathi, Brachiopods, and Amphioxus. The former found that m the larvae of Ecbinoderms and in Torn aria, the larva of Balanoglossus, the walls of the body-cavity are formed from evaginations of the intestinal canal. But a still greater sensation * It is still affirmed by several authors for certain Invertebrates that the inner germ-layer develops, not by infolding, but by a splitting off or delamina- tion from the outer germ-layer. 152 EMBRYOLOGY. was created when KOWALEVSKY in 1871 published his " Embryology of Sagitta," and showed how the cceleriteron of the gastrula was divided by two folds into three cavities, — into the secondary intestinal cavity and into the body-cavities : this discovery was afterwards fully con- firmed by the investigations of BtrrscHLi and the author. After a short interval, KOWALEVSKY'S account of the development of Sagitta was followed by his work on Brachiopods, in which he again enriched science with the new and important fact, that in this class also the body-cavity was formed in the same way as in the case of the Chaetognaths. This was followed by his fundamental work on Amphioxus. Through the important discoveries made on Invertebrates, HUXLEY, LANKESTER, BALFOUR, my brother and I were stimulated to theoretical speculations concerning the origin of the body-cavity and the middle germ-layer in the animal kingdom. HUXLEY distinguished three kinds of body-cavity according to their origin : (1) an enter ocoel, which arises as in Sagitta, etc., from evagi- nations of the coelenteron ; (2) a schizoccel, which is developed by means of fission in a mesodermal connective substance lying between the integument and the intestine ; (3) an epiccel, which is formed by an invagination of the surface of the body like the perithoracic space of the Tunicates. The last kind, HUXLEY thinks, may perhaps correspond to the pleuroperitoneal cavities of the Vertebrates. LANKESTER makes HUXLEY'S paper his starting-point. He gives preference to the hypothesis of the common origin of the body- cavity in all animals until decisive proof of diverse origins is produced ; and, in fact, he makes the schizoccel arise out of the enterocoel in the following manner. Evaginations of the coelenteron have lost their lumen, and therefore are begun as solid cell-masses, which only subsequently acquire a cavity. While LANKESTER in this, as well as in a second publication, overlooks existing differences in his effort to reduce everything to a single scheme, BALFOUR in various essays takes more fully into account in his speculations the actual condition of affairs ; he also limits himself chiefly to the explanation of the conditions in Vertebrates. In investigating the development of Selachians, he made the important discovery that the middle germ-layer arises from the lateral margins of the primi- tive mouth, and at first consists of two separate masses of cells, which grow out forwards and laterally into the space between the two primary germ-layers. Since in each cell-mass a separate cavity soon makes its appearance, he designates the body-cavity as from the HISTORY OF THE GERM-LAYER THEORY. 153 beginning a paired structure, and compares it to the body-sacs which are developed in Invertebrates by evagination from the ccelenteron. BALFOUR justly alleges that the originally solid con- dition of the two fundaments can have no weight against his inter- pretation, since in numerous instances organs which ought properly to contain cavities are developed solid, and subsequently become hollow, as, for example, in many Echinoderms one encounters solid cell-masses in place of hollow evaginations of the coelenteron. Led by theoretical considerations similar to those of the English morphologists, my brother and I, by a thorough comparison of de- velopmental and anatomical conditions, and with due regard to the morphological and histologicai structure of organisms, then en- deavored to bring to a solution this question of the day, — the question of the development of the body-cavity and the middle germ-layers, — by systematic investigations (published in " Studien zur Blatter- theorie "), which extended over Invertebrates and Vertebrates. The results of these series of investigations were published in two articles : (1) in the " Co3lomtheorie, Versuch einer Erklarung des mittleren Keimblattes," and (2) in the " Entwicklung des mittleren Keimblattes der Wirbelthiere." In the first paper, in order to prepare the way, we were compelled to give the term germ-layer a more precise definition. We designated as such a layer of embryonic cells which are arranged like an epithelium and serve for the limitation of the surfaces of the body. At the close of segmentation there is only one germ-lay w present ; namely, the epithelium of the blastula. The remaining germ-layers arise from it by the processes of invagination and evagination. The inner germ-layer is formed by means of gastrulation, the two middle germ-layers by the formation of the body -cavities, in that two body-sacs are evaginated from the cozlenteron, and grow out between and separate the two primary germ-layers. There are, in the first place, animals which are formed of two germ-layers, and possess in their bodies only one cavity, a coelenteron, produced by invagination (Coelenterata and Pseudoccelia), and, secondly, animals with four germ-layers, a secondary intestine, and a body-cavity derived from the coslenteron — an enterocosl. To the two-layered animals belong the Co3lenterates and the Pseudocoels, but all four-layered animals are Enterocoels. From this standpoint we endeavored to prove that hitherto there had been confused under the conception " middle germ-layer " two things which are genetically, morphologically, and histologically •entirely different. 154 EMBRYOLOGY. Besides the cell-layers which arose by invaginatioD there had been> assigned to the middle germ-layer cells which detach themselves individually from the primary germ-layers, and give rise between the epithelial layers of the body to the sustentative substances, and also to the blood, when such exists. Embryonic cells of that kind, which are formed by emigration into the space surrounded by the germ-layers, we named the mesenchymatic germ, and the tissue produced from them mesenchyme. This occurs as well in two- layered as in four-layered animals. In our opinion a sharp distinction must be made between the formation of germ-layers, which is correlated with the morphological differentiation of the body, and the formation of mesenchyme, — which will especially engage our attention in one of the next chapters, — if clearness and a uniform principle are to be introduced into the whole germ-layer theory. In the second article it was our aim to show that in the Vertebrates a middle germ-layer is developed by infolding. For that purpose the development of Amphibia, Fishes, Reptiles, Birds, and Mammals was compared with the development of Amphioxus, and thus was acquired the foundation upon which is based the account of the development of the middle germ-layer given in the preceding chapter. After the publication of these two papers, there appeared numerous articles by VAN BENEDEN, DUVAL, HEAPE, HOFFMANN, K^LLIKER, KOLLMANN, RABL, RUCKERT, STRAHL, WALDEYER, and others, through which valuable facts concerning the development of the middle germ* layer in the different classes of Vertebrates have been made known. In some of these the chief points of view of the ccelom-theory were in general recognised as correct, attempts were made to modify details, but especially was the question of the formation of the mesenchyme of the Vertebrates actively discussed. The mechanical principle oj the process oj development, by means of which tJie germ-layers are formed, and out of these the separate, organs, is appreciated in its full significance by only a few, and in text-books particularly has not been adequately presented. Among the founders of the germ-layer theory, PANDER best com- prehended this principle. " The blastoderm," he says in one place,. " forms, exclusively through the simple process of folding, the body and the viscera of the animal. A delicate thread attaches itself as the spinal cord to it, and scarcely has this taken place, when the blastoderm sends the first folds, which themselves necessarily designate the position of the spinal cord, as an envelope over the exquisite fila- HISTORY OF THE GERM-LAYER THEORY. 155- ment, thus forming the first foundation of the body. Hereupon it produces new folds, which, in contradistinction to the first, give shape to the abdominal and thoracic cavities, together with their contents. And for the third time it sends out folds to envelop in suitable membranes the foetus, which is formed out of it and by means of it. Therefore it need not surprise any one if, in the course of our narration, so much is said about folds and envelopes." And in order to avoid misunderstandings he adds in another place the important statement that "wherever anything is said about the folds of the skin, one is not to imagine a lifeless membrane, whose mechanically produced folds would necessarily spread themselves over the whole surface, without allowing themselves to be limited to a definite space. The folds which cause the metamorphosis of the skin are rather themselves of organic origin, and are produced at the- appropriate place, either through increase in the size of the spherules already present there, or through an accession of new spherules, without the remaining part of the blastoderm being thereby altered." PANDER'S successors have expressed themselves concerning the mechanism of foldings much less clearly ; the most of them, indeed, not at all. The whole doctrine was in fact condemned by RUDOLPH WAGNER as positively erroneous. " It will occur to no one," he say& in his " Lehrbuch der Physiologie," " to imagine the three germ- layers to be like the leaves of a book. No one will entertain the mechanical conception that the embryo arose by a folding process of these three layers." After PANDER. LOTZE was the next to be occupied with the " Mechanik der Gestaltbildimg," as has been pointed out by KAUBER in a meritorious history of this topic. He designates "unequal growth "or " unequal vegetation " as the cause of the changes of place, which in part only appear to be shif tings, out-pocketings, invaginations, or extensions, but in part are actually such, being brought about in this way by mechanical traction and pressure. In very recent times His has prosecuted the study of embryology from the mechanico-physiological standpoint more intensely than all his predecessors, and has also particularly emphasised the signifi- cance of the process of folding for the formation of the body. The two principal writings of His in this connection are: "Unter- suchungen liber die erste Anlage des Wirbelthierleibes " (1868), and " Unsere Korperform und das physiologische Problem ihrer Entstehung " (1874). While I refer for details to the original papers,, I remark that, notwithstanding manifold agreements, I cannot 156 EMBRYOLOGY. in important points assent to His's view. When, for example, His (1874, p. 50) seeks to reduce the mechanics of form to the simple problem of the form-changes in an unequally stretched elastic plate, in my opinion he overlooks the fact that a plate com- posed of cells, even if it possess elastic properties, is, nevertheless, a much more complicated structure, and that the processes of folding and evagination are primarily produced by the energy of the growth of special groups of cells, and are therefore not to be com- pared with the bendings and stretchings of elastic plates. As PANDER has already emphatically stated, one is not to imagine in the folding processes a lifeless membrane, but rather the folds are themselves of organic derivation, called forth at the proper place by a cell-multiplication at that place. For this re i son, too, HAECKEL in his polemic, " Ziele und Wege der heutigen Entwicklungs- geschichte," has attacked this method of treating embryology, introduced by His. That the morphological differentiation of the animal body primarily rests upon a process of folding of epithelial lamellae, my brother and I have endeavored, by means of an abundant series of observations, to demonstrate in a still more exhaustive manner than our pre- decessors. In our " Studien zur Blattertheorie " we have, in the first place, directed attention to the Ccelenterates as the animal organisms in which the principle of the formation of folds is most clearly shown throughout the whole organisation, even into details; andv secondly, we have endeavored to establish for Vertebrates that organs like the body-cavity, chorda, and primitive segments, which it was claimed arose by a separating and splitting of cell-layers, likewise come into existence through the typical process of foldings And constriction. Finally we have endeavored to point out a physiological cause for the unequal growth of a cell-membrane, and have found such in the Ccelenterates in the unlike functional activity of its various regions. Parts of a membrane will grow more rapidly and must become infolded, when in consequence of their position they are called upon to accomplish more than neighboring regions. In concluding this historical sketch attention should be called to the fact that C. E. VON BAER, in the general discussion of embryo- logical processes, was the first to distinguish clearly between the •events of morphological differentiation, which take place in the beginning of development, and those of histological differentiation, which occur later. LITERATURE. LITERATURE ON THE DEVELOPMENT AND HISTORY OF THE GERM-LAYERS. Balfour. A Comparison of the Early Stages in the Development of Verte- brates. Quart. Jour. Micr. Sci. Vol. XV. 1875. Balfour. On the Early Development of the Lacertilia, together with some Observations on the Nature and Relations of the Primitive Streak. Quart. Jour. Micr. Sci. Vol. XIX. 1879. Balfour. On the Structure and Homologies of the Germinal Layers of the Embryo. Quart. Jour. Micr. Sci. Vol. XX. 1880. Balfour and Deighton. A Renewed Stivly of the Germinal Layers of the Chick. Quart. Jour. Micr. Sci. Vol. XXII. p. 176. 1882. Beneden, Ed. van. Recherches sur 1'embryologie des mammiferes. La formation des feuillets chez le lapin. Archives de Biologic. T. I. 1880. Beneden, Ed. van. Untersuchungen Uber die Blatterbildnng, den Chorda- canal und die Gastrulation bei den Saugethieren. Anat. Anzeiger,. Jahrg. III. p. 709. 1888. Beneden, Ed. van. Erste Entwicklungsstadien von Saugethieren. Tage- blatt der 59. Versammlung deutscher Naturf. und Aerzte zu Berlin 1886. Bonnet, R. Beitrage zur Embryologie der Wiederkauer, gewonnen am- Schafei. Archiv f. Anat. u. Physiol. Anat. Abth. 1884. Bonnet, R. Ueber die Entwicklung der Allantois und die Bildung des ATtors bei den Wiederkauern und iiber die Bedeutung der Primitivrinne und des Primitivstreifens bei den Embryonen der Saugethiere. Anat. Anzeiger,. Jahrg. III. 1888. Braun. Die Entwicklung des Wellenpapageis. Arbeiten a. d. zool.-zoot. Inst.. Wurzburg. Bd. V. 1882. Braun. Entwicklungsvorgange am Schwanzende bei einigen Saugethiereru mit Beriicksichtigung der Verhaltnisse beim Menschen. Archiv f. Anat. u. Physiol. Anat. Abth. 1882. Brook. The Formation of the Germinal Layers in Teleostei. Trans. Roy.. Soc. Edinburgh. Vol. XXXIII. p. 199. 1888. Biitschli. Bemerkungen zur Gastraeatheorie. Morphol. Jahrb. Bd. IX. p. 415. 1884. Disse. Die Entwicklung des mittleren Keimblattes im Hiihnerei. Arch. f. mikr. Anat. Vol. XV. 1878. Duval, M. Eludes sur la ligne primitive de 1'embryon du poulet Ann. des Sci. nat., Zool. T. VII. 1880. Duval, M. De la formation du blastoderme dans 1'oeuf d'oiseau. Ann. des Sci. nat., Zool. T. XVIII. 1884. Fleischmann, A. Zur Entwicklungsgeschichte der Raubthiere. Biol. Cen- tralblatt. Bd. VII. 1887. Fleischmann, A. Mittelblatt und Amnion der Katze. Habilitationsschrift. Crasser. Der Primitivstreifen bei Vogelembryonen. Schriften der Gesellsch z. Beforderung d. ges. Naturwiss. Marburg. Bd. XI. 1878. Gasser. Beitrage zur Kenntniss der Vogelkeimscheibe. Archiv f. Anat. u^ Physiol. Anat. Abth. 1882. Gerlach, Leo. Ueber die entodermale Entstehungsweise der Chorda dorsalis.. Biol. Centralblatt. Jahrg. I. 1881. 158 EMBRYOLOGY. 'G-otte. Beitrage zur Entwicklungsgeschichte der Wirbelthiere. Archiv. f mikr. Anat. Bd. X. 1874. Hatschek, B. Studien iiber die Entwicklung des Amphioxus. Arbeiten a. d. zool. Inst. Wien und Triest. Bd. IV. 1881. Eeape, W. Tbe Development of the Mole (Talpa Europasa). Quart. Jour. Micr. Sci. Vol. XXIII. p. 412. 1883. Hertwig, Oscar. Die Entwicklung des mittleren Keimblattes der Wirbel- thiere. Jena 1883. His. Ueber die Bildung von Haifischembryonen. Zeitschr. f. Anat. u. Ent- wicklungsg. Bd. II. p. 108. 1877. His. Neue Untersuchungen iiber die Bildung des H-iihnerembryo. Archiv f. Anat. u. Physiol. Anat. Abth. p. 112. 1877. Hoffmann, C. K. Sur 1'origine du feuillet blastodermique moyen chez les poissons cartilagineux. Archives Neerlandaises. T. XVIII. p. 241. 1883. Hoffmann, C. K. Ueber die Entwicklungsgeschichte der Chorda dorsalis. Festschrift fiir Henle. 1882. Hoffmann, C. K. Die Bildung des Mesoderms, die Anlage der Chorda dorsalis u. die Entwicklung des Canalis neurentericus bei Vogelembryonen. Verhandl. d. koninkl. Akad. d. Wetenschappen. Deel. XXIII. Amster- dam 1883. Hoffmann, C. K. Beitrage zur Entwicklungsgesch. der Reptilien. Zeitschr. f. wiss. Zoologie. Bd. XL. 1884. Hoffmann, C. K. Weitere Untersuchungen zur Eutwicklungsgesch. der Reptilien. Morphol. Jahrb. Bd. XI. p. 176. 1886. Johnson, Alice. On the Fate of the Blastopore and the Presence of a Primitive Streak in the Newt. Quart. Jour. Micr. Sci. Vol. XXIV. 1884. Kastschenko. Zur Entwicklungsgeschichte des Selachierembryos. Anat. Anzeiger. 1888. Koller, C. Beitrage zur Kenntniss des Hiihnerkeims im Beginne der Bebriitung. Sitzungsb. d. k. Akad. d. Wissensch. Bd. LXXX. Abth. III. Wien 1879. Koller, C. Untersuchungen iiber die Blatterbildung im Huhnerei. Archiv f. mikr. Anat, Bd. XX. 1881. Kolliker. Die Entwicklung der Keimblatter des Kaninchens. Festschrift zur Feier des 3GOjahrigen Bestehens der Julias Maxiinilians-Universitat zu Wiirzburg. Leipzig 1882. Kolliker. Ueber die Chordahb'hle und die Bildung der Chorda beim Kanin- chen. Sitzungsb. d. Wurzburger phys.-med. Gesellschaft. 1883. Kolliker. Die embryonalen Keimblatter u. die Gewebe. Zeitschr. f. wiss. Zoologie. Bd. XL. 1884. Kupffer und Benecke. Die ersten Entwicklungsvorgange am Ei der Reptilien. Konig&berg 1878. Kupffer. Die Gastrulation an den meroblastischen Eiern der Wirbelth. und die Bedeutung des Primitivstreifs. Archiv f. Anat. u. Physiol. Anat. Abth. 1882, 1884. Kupffer. Ueber den Canalis neurentericus der Wirbelthiere. Sitzungso. d. Gesellsch. f. Morphol. u. Physiol. Mlinchen. 1887. Lieberkiihn. Ueber die Keimblatter der Saugethiere. Zur 50jahrigen Doctor-Jubelfeier des Iterrn Hermann Nasse. 1879. Xieberkiihn. Ueber die Chorda bei Saugethieren. Archiv f. Anat. u. I'hysiol. Anat. Abth. 1882, 1884. LITERATURE. 159 Mitsukuri and Ishikawa. On the Formation of the Germinal Layers of Chelonia. Quart. Jour. Micr. Sci. Vol. XXVII. p. 17. 1886. Oellacher. Untersuchungen iiber die Furchung und Blatterbildung im Hiihnerei. Strieker's Studien a. d. Inst. f. exper. Pathol. 1870. Pander. Beitrage zur Entwicklung des Hiihnchens im Ei. Wiirzburg 1817. Rauber. Die erste Entwicklung des Kaninchens. Sitzungsb. d. naturf. Gesellsch. Leipzig. 1875. Rauber. Primitivrinne und Urmund. Beitrag zur Entwicklungsgeschichte des Hiihnchens. Morphol. Jahrb. Bd. II 1876. Rauber. TJcber die Stellung des Hiihnchens irn Entwicklungsplan. Leipzig 1876. Rauber. Primitivstreifen n. Neurula der Wirbelthiere. Leipzig 1877. Rauber. Die Lage der Keimpforte. Zool. Anzeiger, Jahrg. II., p. 499. 1879. Rauber. Thier u. Pflanze. Zool. Anzeiger, Jahrg. IV. p. 130, etc. 1881. Rauber. Noch ein Blast oporus. Zool. Anzeiger, Jabrg. VI. p. 143. 1883. Romiti. De I'extremite anterieure de la corde dorsale et de son rapport avec la poche hypophysaire ou de Rathke chez 1'embryon du poulet Archives italiennes de Biologie. T. VII. p. 226. 1885. Riickert, J. Zur Keimblattbilclung bei Selachiern. Munchen 188 Riickert, J. Ueber die Anlage des mittleren Keimblattes und die erste Blutbildung bei Torpedo. Anat. Anzeiger, Jahrg. II. Nr. 4, 6. 1887. Riickert, J. Weitere Beitrage zur Keimblattbildung bei Selachiern. Anat Anzeiger, Jahrg. IV. Nr. 12. 1889. Schultze, O. Zur ersten Entwicklung des braunen Grasfrosches. Gratu- lationsschrift f. Geh. Rath v. Kblliker. Leipzig 1887. Schultze, O. Die Entwicklung der Keimblatter und der Chorda dorsalis von Rana fusca. Zeitschr. f. wiss. Zoologie. Bd. XLVII. 1888. Schwink, F. Ueber die Entwicklung des mittleren Keimblattes und der Chorda dorsalis der Amphibien. Munchen 1889. Scott, W. B., and H. F. Osborn. On some Points in the Early Develop- ment of the Common Newt. Studies Morphol. Laboratory University of Cambridge. 1880. Also Quart. Jour. Micr. Sci. Vol. XIX. 1879. Selenka, Em.il. Studien iiber Entwicklungsgeschichte der Thiere. I.-IV. Wiesbaden 1883-7. Selenka, Emll. Keimblatter u. Primitivorgane der Maus. Wiesbaden 1883. Selenka, Emil. Die Blatterumkehrung im Ei der Nagethiere. Wiesbaden 1884. Solger. Studien zur Entwicklungsgeschichte des Coeloms und des Ccelom- epithels der Amphibien. Morphol. Jahrb. Bd. X. p. 494. 1885. Spee, Graf F. Beitrag zur Entwicklungsgeschichte der f riiheren Stadien des Meerschweinchens bis zur Vollendung der Kaimblase. Arch. f. Anat. u. Physiol. Anat. Abth. 1883. Spee, G-raf F. Ueber die Entwicklungsvorgange vom Knoten aus in Saugethierkeimscheiben. Anat. Anzeiger. 1888. Spee, Graf F. Beobachtungen an einer menschlichen Keimscheibe mit offener Medullarrinne u. Canalis neurentericus. Arch, f . Anat. u. Physiol. Anat. Abth. 1889. Spencer, "W. On the Fate of the Blastopore in Rana temporaria. Zool. Anzeiger, Jahrg. VIII. p. 97. 1885. 160 EMBRYOLOGY. Spencer, W. Some Notes on the Early Development of Rana temporaria. Quart. Jour. Micr. Sci. 1885. Supplement, p. 123. Strahl, H. Ueber die Entwicklung des Canalis myeloentericus und der Allantois der Eidechse. Archiv f. Anat. u. Physiol. Anat. Abth. 1881. Strahl, H. Beitrage zur Entwicklung von Lacerta agilis. Arehiv f. Anat. u. Physiol. Anat. Abth. 1882. Strahl, H. Beitrage zur Entwicklung der Reptilien. Archiv f. Anat. u.. Physiol. Anat. Abth. pp. 1-43. 1883. Strahl, H. Ueber Canalis neurentericus u. Allantois bei Lacerta viridis Archiv f. Anat. u. Physiol. Anat. Abth. 1883 Strahl, H. Ueber Entwicklungsvorgange am Vorderende des Embryo von Lacerta agilis. Archiv f. Anat. u. Physiol. Anat. Abth. 1884. Strahl, H. Ueber Wachsthumsvorgange an Embryonen von Lacerta agilis. Abhandl. d. Senckenberg. naturf. Gesellschaft. Frankfurt a. M. 1884. Swaen, A. Etude sur le developpement des feuillets et des premiers ilots- sanguins dans le blastoderme de la Torpille. Extraits des Bull, de 1'Acad- roy. de Belgique. 3 ser. T. IX. 1885. Swaen, A. Etudes sur le developpement de la Torpille. Archives de Biologic. 188G. T. VII. Waldeyer. Bemerkungen liber die Keimblatter und den Primitivstreifen bei der Entwicklung des Huhnerembryo. Zeitschr. f. rationelle Medicin.. 1869. Waldeyer. Die neueren Forechungen im Gebiet der Keimblattlehre. Ber- liner klin. Wochenschr. Nr. 17, 18. 1885. Haeckel. Die Gastrseatheorie, die phylogenetische Classification des Thier- reichs u. die Homologie der Keimblatter. Jena. Zeitschr. Bd. VIII. pp. 1-55. 1874. Haeckel. Die Gastrula u. die Eifurchung der Thiere. Jena. Zeitschr. Bd. IX. p. 402. 1875. Haeckel. Nachtrage zur Gastraeatheorie. Jena. Zeitschr. Bd. XI. p. 55. 1877. Haeckel. Ursprung u. Entwicklung der thierischen Gewebe. Ein histo- genetischer Beitrag zur Gastraeatheorie. Jena. Zeitschr. Bd. XVIII. p. 206. 1885. Hertwig, Oscar und Richard. Studien zur Blattertheorie. Heft I.-V. Jena 1879—1883. Hertwig, Oscar. Die Chaetognathen. Ihre Anatomic, Systematik und Entwicklungsgeschicbte. Eine Monographic. Jena 1880. Hertwig, Oscar und Richard. Die Coelomtheorie. Versuch einer Erklarung des mittleren Keimblattes. Jena 1881. Huxley. On the Classification of the Animal Kingdom. Quart. Jour. Micr, Sci. Vol. XV. 1875. Huxley. The Anatomy of Invertebrated Animals. 1877. German edition by Spengel. Grundztige der Anatomic der Wirbelthiere. 1878. Lankester, E. Ray. On the Primitive Cell-layers of the Embryo as the- Basis of Genealogical Classification of Annuals, and on the Origin of Vascular and Lymph Systems. Annals and Mag. Nat. Hist. Vol. XI. 1873. DEVELOPMENT OF THE PRIMITIVE SEGMENTS. 161 Xankester, E. Ray. Notes on the Embryology and Classification of the Animal Kingdom : comprising a Kevision of Speculations Relative to the Origin and Significance of the Germ-layers. Quart. Jour. Micr. Sci. Vol. XVII. 1877. Xeuckart, R. Ueber die Morphologic und Verwandtschaftsverhaltnisse dcr wirbellosen Thiere. Braunschweig. 1848. Kowalevsky. Entwicklungsgeschichte der Sagitta. M6m. de 1'Acad. imper. des Sci. St. Petersbourg. Vile s6r. T. XVI. 1871. Kowalevsky. Untersuchungen iiber die Entwicklung der Brachiopoden. Nachrichten d. kaiserl. Gesellsc d. Freunde d. Naturerkenntniss, etc. Bd. XIV. Moskau 1875. (Russia Kowalevsky. Weitere Studien uber die Entwicklungsgeschichte des Amphioxus lanceolatus, nebst einem Beitrage zur Homologie des Nerven- systems der Wiirmer und Wirbelthiere. Archiv f. mikr. Anat. Bd. XIII. 1877, p. 181. MetschnikofF. Studien iiber die Entwicklung der Echinodermen u. Ne- mertinen. M§m. de 1'Acad. imper. des Sci. St. Petersbourg. Vile ser. T. XIV. Nr. 8. 1869. MetschnikofF. Untersuchungen iiber die Metamorphose einiger Seethiere. Zeitschr. f. wiss. Zoologie. Bd. XX. 1870. MetschnikofF. Studien iiber die Entwicklung der Medusen und Siphono- phoren. Zeitschr. f. wiss. Zoologie. Bd. XXIV. 1874. Wolff, Gasp. Fr. Ueber die Bildung des Darmcanals na bebriiteten Huhnchen. Uebersetzt von Fr. Meckel. Halle 1812. Haeckel. Ziele und Wege der heutigen Entwicklungsgeschichte. Jena 1875. His. Untersuchungen iiber die erste Anlage des Wirbelthierleibes. Leipzig 1868. His. Unsere Korperform und das physiol. Problem ihrer Entstehung. Leipzig 1871. Tiotze. Allgemeine Physiologic. Leipzig 1851. Oken. Kritik der Dissertation von Pander. Isis 1817. Bd. II., p. 1529. Pander. Entwicklungsgeschichte des Kiichels. Oken's Isis. Jahrgang 1818. Bd. I., pp. 512-24. Rauber. Formbildung und Formstorung in der Entwicklung von Wirbel- thieren. Capitel IV. (Formbildung und Cellularmechanik.) Morphol. Jahrb. Bd. VI. 1880. Roux. Die Entwicklungsmechanik der Organismen. Eine anatomische Wissenschaft der Zukunft. 1890. Wagner, Rudolph. Lehrbuch d. Physiologic. 3. Auflage. Leipzig 1845. CHAPTER VIII. DEVELOPMENT OF THE PRIMITIVE SEGMENTS. THE more one pursues the development of Vertebrates into later stages, the more numerous become the changes which simultaneously appear in the different regions of the embryonic body. We cannot here undertake to describe step by step the processes which are -simultaneously accomplished, for by that method the presentation 11 162 EMBRYOLOGY. would become fragmentary and the comprehension of the separate processes would be made more difficult ; but it is necessary, in the interest of a didactic method, to select from all the manifold pheno- mena a single process of the development, and to follow it up until it has come to a preliminary termination. After the formation of the middle germ-layer two important processes take place in the embryonic fundament. One process leads to a division of the middle germ-layers into the two lateral — « usli 5 -- mk Fig. 103. — Amphioxus embryo with five pairs of primitive segments in optical section, afte* HATSCHEK. A Seen from the side. B Seen from the dorsum. In figure B are indicated the openings of the cavities of the primitive segments into the intestinal cavity, which can be seen by deeper focussing. V, Anterior, H, posterior end ; ak, outer, ik, inner, mk, middle gei'm-layer ; dh, intestinal cavity ; n, neural tube ; en, neurenteric canal ; us1, first primitive segment ; ush, cavity of primitive segment ; ud, coalenteron. plates and into two series of cuboidal bodies, which are situated at the right and the left of the chorda, and which, under an erroneous interpretation, were formerly called protovertebrce, but for which one should now substitute exclusively the more accurate name primitive segments [mesoblastic somites]. The other process, which occurs at about the same time, at least in the case of the higher Vertebrates,. leads to the origin of those cells from which the sustentative sub- stances and the blood of Vertebrates are derived. DEVELOPMENT OF THE PRIMITIVE SEGMENTS. 163 ch- in this chapter we shall take into consideration the formation of the primitive segments first in the eggs of Amphioxus and the Amphibians, and then in those of Fishes, Birds, and Mammals. In Amphioxus the formation of the primitive segments is more nearly simultaneous with the development of the middle germ- layer than in the remaining Vertebrates. As soon as the two crelomic sacs begin to grow out from the ccelenteron at the front end of the embryo, there begins a division of them into two rows of small sacs lying one behind the other (fig. 103 A, J3, us], and this division proceeds from in front backwards. Here again we have to do with a process of folding, which repeats itself many times in the same manner. The wall of the groove-like ccelomic evaffination, composed of cylindrical cells, becomes, at a little distance from its head-end, folded transversely to the longitudinal axis of the embryo ; this fold grows from above and from the side downwards into the body- cavity ; in the same manner a second trans- verse fold is soon formed on either side of the . body at a little distance behind the first ; behind the second a third, a fourth, and so on, at the same rate as that at which the em- bryonal body elongates and the fun- dament of the middle germ - layer increases by the progress of the evagination toward the blasto- pore. In the embryo represented in fig. 103 five sacs may be counted on either side of the body. The evagination is taking place at the region marked mk ; it advances still farther toward the blastopore and gives rise to a considerable series of primitive segments, the number of which in a larva only twenty-four hours old has already increased to about seventeen pairs. The primitive segments exhibit at first an opening, by means of which their cavities (ush) are in communication with the intestinal cavity. But these openings soon begin to be closed in succession, by their margins growing toward each other and then coalescing: this takes place in the same sequence as that in which the detachment of the parts takes place, from before Fig. 104.— Cross section through the middle of the body of an Amphioxus embryo with 11 primitive segments, after HATSCHEK. ak, Outer, ik, inner germ-layer ; mk1, parietal, mk1, visceral lamella of the middle germ-layer ; us, primi- tive segment ; n, neural tube ; ch, chorda ; (h, body-cavity ; dh, intes- tinal cavity. 1G4 EMBRYOLOGY. backwards. At the same time the primitive segments (fig. 104} gradually spread out both dorsally and ventrally, while their cells increase in number and become altered in form. They grow upward more and more at the side of the neural tube, which has meanwhile detached itself completely from its matrix, the outer germ-layer. uth A Tig. 105 — Two cross sections through a Triton embryo. A, Cross section through the region of the trunk in which the neural tube is not yet closed an the primitive Fegments begin to be constricted off from the lateral plates. B, Cross section through the region of the trunk in which the neural tube is closed and the primitive segments have been formed. mf, Medullary folds ; mp, medullary plate ; n, neural tube ; ch, chorda ; ak, outer, ik, inner germ-layer ; ink1, parietal, mk*, visceral middle layer ; dh, intestinal cavity ; Ih, body-cavity ush, cavity of primitive segment ; dz, yolk-cells. Toward the ventral side they insert themselves between the secondary intestine and the outer germ-layer Finally, it might be further mentioned here that at a still later stage, as is to be seen on the right side of fig. 104, the dorsal portions of the primitive segment are constricted off from the ventral. The former lose their lumina and furnish the transversely striped DEVELOPMENT OF THE PRIMITIVE SEGMENTS. 165 musculature of the body, but from the cavities of the l^^°£igi^£s the real unsegmented body-cavity, since the partitions which at first separate them become thinner, break through, and finally Similar processes take place in a somewhat modified manner in the. . case of the remaining Vertebrates. f^Af^i In the Tritons the middle germ-layer (fig. 105 A) becomes thickened on both sides of the chorda (ch) and of the fundament of the central nervous system (n), which is not yet closed into a tube, and at the same time there appears a cavity (ush) in its thickened part, caused by the separation of the visceral and parietal lamellae. The thickening is not produced by an increase in the number of the layers of cells, but simply by the fact that the cells increase in height and grow out into long cylinders, which are arranged around the cavity like an epithelium. We distinguish these thickened parts of the middle germ-layer, which lie on either side of the chorda and the nervous system, as the primitive-segment plates, from the lateral parts, or the lateral plates. In the territory of the latter the cells are lower, and ordinarily there is no distinctly marked cavity between visceral and parietal layer. Whereas in Amphioxus the process of forming somites extends itself over the whole of the middle germ-layer, in the case of the Amphibians, and likewise all the re- maining Vertebrates, it affects only the part which is next to the chorda and the neural tube, leaving the lateral plates, on the contrary, untouched. The segmentation begins at the head- end, and proceeds slowly toward the blastopore ; it is accomplished by fold- ing and constricting off. The epithelial lamella next to the neural tube and the chorda, being composed of cylin- drical cells, is raised up into small transverse folds, which, separated from each other by intervals of uniform size, grow into the cavity of the primitive- segment plate, and give rise to small sacs lying one behind the other (fig. 106). Soon afterwards each little sac is constricted off from the lateral plates (fig. J05 A and B). Consequently one now meets, both in Fig. 106.— Frontal section through the dorsum of an embryo Triton with fully developed primitive seg- ments. One sees on both sides of the chorda (ch) the primitive segments (MS) with their cavities (MS/*). 166 EMBRYOLOGY. transverse and frontal sections at the right and left of chorda and neural tube, cubical sacs the walls of which are formed of cylindrical cells ; these sacs are everywhere surrounded by a fissure- like space, and they enclose a small cavity (the primitive-segment cavity), which is a derivative of the body-cavity. From the front layer of the fold is produced the posterior wall of the newly formed segment, from its posterior layer the front wall of the remnant of the primitive-segment plate, or of the sac which is next to be con- stricted off. Of the Vertebrates which are developed out of meroblastic eggs, the Selachians appear to exhibit most clearly the original mode of the formation of primitive segments. A distinct body-cavity is formed on either side of the trunk by the separation of the parietal and visceral lamellae of the middle germ-layer (fig. 110). The dorsal portion of_ the cavity, which flanks the neural tube, acquires thickened walls (rnp\ and corresponds to the part previously designated as the primitive-segment plate, which at the same time with the appear- .ance of the body-cavity begins to be divided into primitive segments. In the anterior part of the body a series of transverse lines of separation become visible (fig. 195 rajt?1), the number of which is continually increased toward the hind end of the body. For a long time the cavities of the primitive segments, which are sepa- rated from one another by these transverse furrows, remain in communication ventrally with the common body-cavity by means of narrow openings. One may therefore describe this state of affairs by saying that the body-cavity is provided toward the back of the embryo with a series of small sac-like evaginations, which lie close together one after the other. Afterwards the primitive seg- ments are ; entirely constricted off from the body-cavity, and then their thickened walls come into close contact, and thus cause the disappearance of the cavities of the segments (fig. Ill mp). Whereas in the Selachians it is still evident that the formation of the primitive segments depends upon folding and constricting off, the process is obscured even to obliteration in the case of Reptiles, Birds, and Mammals ; this is referable simply to the fact that the two lamellae of the middle germ-layer remain for a long time firmly pressed together, only subsequently beginning to separate, and that they are composed of several layers of small cells. The process of hiding and constricting off appears here as a splitting up of a solid cell-plate into small cubical blocks. The part of the middle germ-layer that is next to the chorda and DEVELOPMENT OF THE PRIMITIVE SEGMENTS. 167 neural tube appears in a cross section of a Chick embryo (fig. 107) as a compact mass (Pv) consisting of many superposed small cells, which, as far as it is not divided up into separate blocks, is designated as primitive-segment plate or protovertebral plate. In fig. 107 it is still connected at the side by means of a thin isthmus of cells with the lateral plates, in whose territory the middle germ- layers are thinner and sepa- rated from each other by a fissure. In observing the blasto- germ from the surface the region of the primitive-seg- ment plates, as is to be seen in the posterior part of a nine-days-old Rabbit embryo (fig. 108), appears darker than the region of the lateral plate; so that the two are dis- tinguished from each other ; one is stem-zone (stz), the other parietal zone (pz). The development of the primitive segments is ob- servable in the Chick at the beginning of the second day of incubation, in the Rabbit at about the eighth day. Clear transverse streaks ap- pear in the stem-zone at some distance from the primi- tive streak, about in the middle of the embryonic fundament, both on the right and the left of the chorda and neural tube (fig. 108). They correspond to transverse fissures, by means of which the primitive-segment plates are divided into the small and solid cubical primitive segments (uw). In the nine-days-old Ilabbit embryo represented in fig. 108 these plates are resolved in 168 EMBRYOLOGY. front into eight pairs of primitive segments (uw), whereas in the hind end of the embryonic area they still have the form of a con- tinuous mass of cells, the «,/,. stem-zone (stz), which in sur- .^aiiWBa^^ face-views appears darker than its surroundings. In a somewhat more ad- vanced stage the primitive- segment, which probably se- cretes at the same time fluid, develops in its interior, as in the case of the Amphibia and Selachii, a cavity, around which the cells group them- selves in a radial manner. This cavity, too, is at first in communication laterally with the fissure of the body-cavity, until the primitive segment has been fully constricted off. In Vertebrates, besides the- trunk-region, a part of tho head-region of the embryo is also affected by this process, of segmentation which we- have been considering. We must therefore speak in the one case of head-segments, and in the other of trunk- segments. Up to the present time the number and condi- tion of the head-segments have been made out (by BALFOUR, MILNES MARSHALL, and VAN WIJHE) most accurately for the Selachians. In this in- stance there are nine pairs of hollow head-segments. In the higher Vertebrates such segments although fewer in number, have ulso been described; however, the less sharply differentiated structuies of the latter demand still further investigation. Fig. 108.— Rabbit embryo of the ninth day, seen from the dorsal side, after KOLLIKER. Magnified 21 diameters. The stem -zone (stz) and the parietal zone (pz) are to be distinguished. In the former 8 pairs of primitive segments have been established at the side of the chorda and neural tube. ap, Area pellucida ; rf, medullary groove ; vh, fore brain ; ab, eye-vesicle ; mh, mid brain ; M, hind brain ; u-w, primitive segment ; stz, stem-zone ; pz, parietal zone ; h, heart ; ph, pericardial part of the body-cavity ; vd, margin of the entrance to the head-gut (vordere Darmpforie), seen through the overlying structures ; of, amniotic fold ; vo, vena omphalomesenterica. DEVELOPMENT OF THE PRIMITIVE SEGMENTS. 169 But, in any event, the accurate study of the earliest embryonic segmentation of the body into a large number of metameres yields this result of the highest importance for the general morphology of the Vertebrate body, that the head not less than the trunk represents a segmented portion of the body and has in no wise been produced from a single primitive segment. SUMMARY. 1. In Vertebrates the middle germ-layers immediately after their origin are differentiated into several fundaments by processes of folding and constricting off. 2. The process of differentiation in the middle germ-layer exhibits two modifications. (a) In Amphioxus the middle germ-layers are, at the time of their first appearance, completely separated into primitive segments lying one behind the other. It is only later that each primitive segment is divided into a dorsal portion (the real primitive segment) and a ventral portion. The dorsal portion, or primitive segment proper, furnishes the transversely striped musculature of the trunk. The ventral segments form the body-cavity, which is at first segmented, but afterwards with the disappearance of the partitions becomes a single cavity. (b) In all other Vertebrates the fundaments of the middle germ-layers are divided first into a dorsal and a ventral region — into the primitive-segment plates and the lateral plates. The lateral plate remains unsegmented. The body-cavity, which becomes visible in it by separation of the pariotal and the visceral lamellae of the middle layer, is from the beginning on each side of the body a single space. The primitive-segment plate alone is divided into successive primitive segments. 3. The segmentation of the middle germ-layers also extends over the future head-region of the embryo. One therefore distinguishes — (a) Head-segments, the number of which amounts to nine ; (b) Trunk- segments, the number of which is constantly being increased during the development of the posterior trunk- 170 EMBRYOLOGY. CHAPTER IX. DEVELOPMENT OF CONNECTIVE SUBSTANCE AND BLOOD. ( THE MESENCHYME- THE OR Y. ) WITH the question of the origin of connective or mechanically sus- tentative substance and blood we enter a very difficult field, the cultivation of which has now been taken in hand successfully by many persons. Here also we shall acquaint ourselves with a simple case from the development of Invertebrates, before we begin with the conditions in Vertebrates, which are more difficult to comprehend. In Coelenterates and Echinoderms there is developed between the germ-layers, which are composed of epithelial cells, a sustentative tissue. It consists of a homogeneous jelly, in which are scattered a Fig. 109.— Two stages of development of Holothuria tubulosa, in optical section (after SELENKA), from BALFOUR. A, Blastosphere-stage at the end of cleavage. B, Gastrula-stage. mr, Micropyle; fl, chorion; s.c, segmentation-cavity, in which gelatinous substance is early secreted as a gelatinous core ; bl, blastoderm ; ep, outer, hy, inner germ-layer ; ms, amoeboid cells arising from the inner germ -layer ; a.e, ccelenteron (archenteron). few isolated spheroidal or stellate cells, which are capable of changing position by virtue of their amoeboid motion. It is usually developed very early ; in the Echinoderms, for example, as early as the blastula- stage (fig. 109). Into the cavity of the blastula (^4) a homogeneous soft substance, the jelly-core (s.c), is secreted by the epithelial cells. Into this jelly there migrate from the epithelium, and indeed from the particular region which at the time of gastrulation is infolded (fig. 109 B) as the DEVELOPMENT OF CONNECTIVE SUBSTANCE AND BLOOD. 171 inner germ-layer (%), numerous cells (ms), which loose their epi- thelial character, and send out processes in the manner of lymph- corpuscles. They soon distribute themselves as migratory cells everywhere in the jelly. In the gastrula -stage and subsequently, the cell-containing jelly between the outer and the inner germ-layers represents a third sheet, which is distinguished from the latter histologically, and, according to the definition previously given, cannot be designated as a middle ^germ-layer ; for by that definition we understand the term to be limited to a sheet of embryonic cells, having an epithelial arrange- ment and bounding a surface. The jelly-like sheet is a product of the germ-layers, which may be distinguished from them by the name mesenchyme or intermediate layer (Zwischenblatt). Once formed, the mesenchyme continues to grow as an independent tissue, in that the cells which at first migrated into the jelly at a definite stage of development, to which one may give the name mesenchyme-germ, continue to increase uninterruptedly by means of cell-division. In its growth it penetrates into all the interstices which arise when the germ-layers, as happens in many Ccelenterates, produce the most complicated structures by the formation of folds and paginations ; it furnishes everywhere a support for the epithelial layers which repose upon it. At the same time some of the mesen- •cbyme-cells can alter their original histological character as simple trophic or nutritive cells of the intermediate substance. Thus here &nd there they differentiate contractile substance at their surface, and become, as is to be seen in Ctenophores aiidEchinoderms, smooth muscle-cells, the ends terminating either in one fine point, or dividing themselves into several processes, as is more frequently the <;ase with Invertebrates. In Vertebrates also, after the two primary germ-layers have arisen, a process similar to that which we have just considered appears to lead to the formation of connective tissue and blood, two tissues which correspond morphologically and physiologically to the mesen- -chyme of Invertebrates. In the first two editions of the " Lehrbuch " I set forth that the whole mesenchyme-question in the Vertebrates was still in a nascent -condition, that the account therefore presented nothing final, but bore in many respects the character of the provisional. Since that time an essential advance has been made in this field. Thanks to the investigations of HATSCHEK and RABL, of RUCKERT, ZIEGLER, and VAN WIJHE, we have acquired more accurate explanations concerning 172 EMBRYOLOGY. the origin of the connective substances ; the question of the origii> of the vascular endothelium and of the blood, on the contrary, is one that is less cleared up. This determines me to treat the two questions separately in the following account. A. The Origin of the Connective Tissues. Selachian embryos appear to be the most suitable objects on which to trace the origin of the connective substances. Here the middle germ-layer serves as the matrix for the mesenchymatic tissue. At the time when the primitive segment is still connected below with the lateral plates, and when the body-cavity is visible in the latter, there appears a cell-growth at the lower border of each primitive segment on the side which is directed toward the chorda. It is ordi- narily designated as sclerotome. It contains at first a small evagi- nation of the body-cavity (fig. 258 A sk). At the restricted place designated, which is marked off from its surroundings, and which recurs on each primitive segment, cells in large numbers (fig. 110 sty individually detach themselves from the epithelial layer, remove- by active migration from their place of origin, like the mesen- chymatic cells of Invertebrates, and distribute themselves in the space which is limited on the one side by the inner wall (mp) of the primitive segment, and on the other by the chorda (ch) and the neural tube (nr). At the time of their appearance the amoeboid cells are separated by only a small amount of inter-cellular substance : they increase rapidly in number, and thereby soon crowd chorda, neural tube, and primitive segment farther apart (fig. 111). The segmentnl arrange- ment which the growths exhibit at their first appearance (fig. 195 Vr)- very early ceases to exist, since by their extension they become fused together into a continuous sheet. The jmsriirhyme, which thus grows forth out of the middle germ- layer on both sides of the chorda, furnishes the foundation for the whole axial skeleton', it produces the skeleton 'nous tissue by the growing toward each other and the fusion of the masses which are formed on the right and left sides. As fig. Ill shows, the mesen- chyme (sk) grows around the chorda (ch) both dorsally and ventrally, and envelops it with a connective-tissue sheath, which is continually becoming thicker. In the same manner it encloses the neural tube (nr)_and forms the membrana reuniens superior of the older embryo- logists, the foundation out of which subsequently the connective- DEVELOPMENT OF CONNECTIVE SUBSTANCE AND BLOOD. 173 tissue envelopes of the neural tube and the vertebral arches with their ligaments are differentiated. Conditions similar to those of Selachians are also to be observed, Fig. 110. Fig. 111. "Figs. 110 and 111. — Diagrams of cross sections through younger and older Selachian embryos to illustrate the development of the principal products of the middle germ-layer. After VAN WIJHE, with some changes. Fig. 110.— Cross section through the region of the pronephros of an embryo, in which the myotomes (mp) are in process of being constricted off. Fig. 111.- Cross section through a somewhat older embryo, in which the myotomes have just been detached. w, Neural tube ; ch, chorda ; ao, aorta ; sch, subnotochordal rod ; mp, muscle-plate of the primitive segment ; w. zone of growth, at which the muscle-plate bends over into the cutis- plate (cp) ; vb, portion connecting the primitive segment with the [walls of the] body-cavity, out of which are developed, among other things, the mesonephric tubules uk (fig. Ill) ; sk, skeletogenous tissue, which arises as an outgrowth from the median wall of the con- necting portion (vb) ; vn, pronephros ; ink1, parietal, ink*, visceral middle layer, from the walls of which mesenchyme is developed ; Ih, body-cavity ; ik, entoderm ; h, cavity of the primitive segment ; uk, mesonephric tubule, arisen from the connecting portion vb of the diagram 110 ; uk1, place where the mesonephric tubule has detached itself from the primitive segment ; ug, mesonephric duct, with which the mesonephric tubule has united on the left side ; tr, union of the mesonephric tubule with the body-cavity (nephridial funnel) ; mes1, mes2, mesenchyme. which has arisen from the parietal and visceral lamellae of the middle layer respectively. although less distinctly, in Reptiles, Birds, and Mammals ; they have been described by REMAK, KOLLIKER, and others, and have been brought into connection with the formation of the vertebral column. "The primitive segments, which are at first solid, soon acquire a small cavity (fig. 116), around which the cells are arranged into a 174 EMBRYOLOGY. continuous epithelium. Then a part of the wall of the primitive segment lying at its lower and median angle begins to grow with extraordinary rapidity, and to furnish a mass of embryonic connective- tissue, which spreads itself around the chorda and neural tube in the manner previously described. The dorsal and lateral parts of the primitive segment (fig. 116 ms), which subsequently loses its cavity, are not involved in this growth; out of them arise principally the fundaments of the trunk -musculature. This part is consequently now distinguished as muscle-plate (ms). Mesenchyme arises from three other places of the middle germ- layer besides the primitive segments — from the visceral lamella, from the parietal lamella, and finally from that wall of the primitive- segment which is turned toward the epidermis and has been given by E.ABL the name >, cutis-plate. Here also the conditions are best followed in Selachii. Individual cells migrate out from the visceral lamella (Darm- faserblatt), which in early stages is composed partly of cubical f partly of cylindrical cells (fig. 110 mk*\ and distribute themselves upon the surface of the entodermic layer ; they are found at places where no trace of a vessel is observable. They furnish the mesenchyma of the intestinal wall, which is ever becoming more abundant, and which is subsequently converted partly into connective tissue, partly into the smooth muscle-cells of the tunica muscularis (fig. Ill mes*). A similar process is repeated in the parietal lamella (Haut- faserblatt). Emigrating cells produce between the epithelium of the body-cavity and that of the epidermis an intermediate layer of mesenchy me -cells (fig. 110 ink1, fig. Ill mes1). An important region for the production of connective tissue is, finally, the cutis-plate, i.e., the epithelial layer of the original primi- tive segment which is in contact with the epidermis (fig. 110 cjo). The process occurs here later than at the other places mentioned, and begins with an active cell-growth, which gradually leads to a complete disintegration of the epithelial lamella. " The disintegra- tion," as RABL remarks, " proceeds in such a manner that the cells, which hitherto exhibited an epithelial character, separate them- selves from one another, and thereby lose their epithelial character.' It is probably from this part of the mesenchyme that the corium is derived. That the mesenchyme-cells scattered between the epithelial lam- ellae are capable of executing extensive migrations, after the fashion DEVELOPMENT OF CONNECTIVE SUBSTANCE AND BLOOD. 175 of migratory cells, is perhaps best shown in the investigation of transparent embryos of Bony Fishes. " One sees distinctly," thus WENKEBACH describes it, "how the cells by means of amoeboid motions, and of sometimes extraordinarily long protoplasmic pro- cesses, move themselves about independently in the body of the em- bryo and upon the yolk, which is not yet clothed with hypoblast, and creep toward definite places, as if they acted voluntarily and consciously/' By virtue of this peculiarity, the mesenchyme-cells actively penetrate into all larger and smaller fissures which exist between the germ-layers and the fundaments of organs which have arisen from them. Everywhere they form a filling and connecting mass between these structures, which afterwards acquires a still greater importance as the bearer of blood- and lymph-courses as well as nerves. In comparison with the earlier editions of the " Lehrbuch," I have here given an essentially different presentation of the development of the mesen- chyme. Formerly, supported by the investigations of liis, WALDEYER, KOLL- MANN, and others on meroblastic eggs, I thought it necessaiy to refer the chief source of the mesenchyme to a limited territory of the germ, to the area opaca, and made the cell -material arise by delamination from the entodermic layer, especially from the yolk- wall. But now I assume a manifold origin from various regions of the middle germ-layer. Thus I come back again to an in- terpretation which I had already propounded as probable in '; Die Coelomtheorie '' (p. 80) and "Die Entwickelung des mittleren Keimblattes " (p. 122), — to the interpretation, namely, that mesenchyme -germs in Vertebrates are perhaps formed by an emigration of cells at several distinct places at the same time. Whether this or that be the real mode, the essence of the mesenchyma-theory is not thereby affected, for the essential part of that theory consists in this, that it establishes in the earliest development of tissue a contrast between the epithelial germ-layers and a packing tissue, produced by a dissolution of the epithelial continuity, which spreads itself out between the germ-layers, and soon appears as an independent structure. Indeed, with this theory as a basis, it would not be surprising if the pro- duction of mcKcnchymatic tissue should not be limited simply to the middle germ- Layer, and -if the entoderm by the contribution of cell-material should participate in its formation. B. The Origin of the Vascular Endothelia and the Blood. The question of the origin of the tissues represented in the above heading is one of the most obscure in the realm of comparative embryology. The very investigators who have endeavored most recently and with the most reliable methods to elucidate this matter do not hesitate to emphasise the uncertainty in the interpretation of the conditions presented to them. Even the lowest Vertebrate, which is distinguished by the greater simplicity of its structure, and 176 EMBRYOLOGY. by the greater ease with which all its processes of development are understood, has failed us in this question. For HATSCHEK, who knows the development of Amphioxus better than any one else, de- signates the blood-vessels as the only system of organs concerning which he was unable to arrive at a clear understanding. Consequently in the field now to be examined there are many views and observations which in part stand in the most direct antagonism to each other. To give a comprehensive review of them is not possible without the greatest fulness, which would be contrary to the plan of this Text-book; I therefore limit myself, first, to giving a survey of the various possibilities by which the origin of the vessels and the blood might take place, and, secondly, to present- ing _a_jerie^_p^_obs^rvations which have been made on Selachians, Birds, and Mammals ; still it is always to be kept in mind that much remains doubtful here, and that coming years may bring about many a change in our interpretations. According to one view, the vascular cavities are developed out of fissure-like spaces between the germ-layers which remain unoccupied at the time the fundament of the mesenchyme is produced. These cavities acquire a boundary in this way : the neighboring mesenchyme-cells begin to penetrate into them, and then unite into a vascular endo- thelium. " The system of blood-vessels and that of lymphatic vessels," observes ZIEGLER, " are produced in their first fundaments from remnants of the primary body-cavity (the space between the primary germ-layers), which at the general distribution of the formative tissue (mesenchyma) remain behind as vessels, lacunae, or interstices, and are enclosed by that tissue and incorporated in it." The formed elements [corpuscles] arise at separate places in the blood-courses by the growth and detachment of mesenchymatic cells. According to another view, the vessels are constructed in this manner : cells in the mesenchymatic tissue arrange themselves iu rows, and these cell-cords become hollowed out ; thereby the more superficial cells furnish the endothelial wall, whereas the remaining <^lls become blood-corpuscles. The blood-vessels are therefore nothing else than cavities which have been secondarily produced in the mesenchymatic tissues by means of their own cells. _ Both views agree in this, that they cause the group of sustrntative substances to be brought into genetic connection with the blood, and the latter to figure as a product of the metamorphosis of the mcst-ncliyma. Moreover, both views may present vari.-itions in the details, according as they ascribe to the mesenchyme a different origin and DEVELOPMENT OF CONNECTIVE SUBSTANCE AND BLOOD. 177 make it arise either out of the middle germ-layer alone, or out of the entoblast alone, or by the migration of cells out of both layers and their union into a single fundament. Still other variations result from the first fundament of the blood-course being some- times referred to a limited territory of the germ, sometimes to several places. Thus, for the meroblastic eggs of Birds, the area opaca is designated by some observers as the place where vessels and blood are first formed. From here they grow out as it were at first into the embryonic body proper. The opposite is reported of Bony Fishes, in which the first vessels, heart, aorta, caudal veins, and sub-intestinal veins, together with blood -corpuscles, arise earliest in the embryonic body itself, whereas they appear on the yolk only subsequently. Finally, for the Selachians a local origin of the vessels is maintained both for the area opaca and also for the embryonic body in the restricted sense. In opposition to the two views hitherto presented, a third view assumes a separate origin for the connective substances on the one band, and for the vascular endothelium and the blood on the other. Whereas the former are produced by the emigration of cells from the middle germ-layer, the vascular endothelium is maintained to arise from cells of the entoblast. It is held that an endothelial sac is formed (perhaps by constriction) as an independent fundament, which by budding gives rise to the whole vascular system. After this brief survey of the various possibilities concerning the origin of the blood-course, I turn to a description of certain con- ditions, concerning the signification of which it must be admitted that the views are also often very divergent. The area opaca of the meroblastic eggs of Fishes, Reptiles, and Birds has always played an important role in the literature on the question of the origin of the blood. Notwithstanding the frequency with which it has been investigated, the researches concerning it cannot be regarded as concluded. It is from this standpoint that I beg the reader to judge what follows. In the case of the Chick, on which especially we shall base our account, the opaque area is composed of only the two primary germ- layers at the time when the middle germ-layer begins to be formed from the region of the blastopore by the production of folds. The outer germ-layer, as has already been described in Chapter V., has in general a simple structure, since it is composed of a single layer of small cubical cells. The inner germ-layer (fig. 56 ik and fig. 112), on the contrary, alters its condition the more we approach 12 178 EMBRYOLOGY. the margin of the disc. In the area pellucida and in the immediately surrounding parts it appears as a single layer of greatly flattened cells, and is separated from the yolk-floor by a cavity filled with an albuminous fluid ; in the opaque area it reposes directly upon the yolk; its cells here become higher, cubical, or polygonal, and finally it terminates with a greatly thickened marginal zone, the previously mentioned yolk-\vall (f//r). This is the important region of the germ with which we now have especially to deal. The yolk- wall consists in the Chick partly of embryonic cells, which are separable from one another, partly of yolk-material are enclosed large and dk dw ^Fig. 112.— Section through the margin of the germinal disc of a Hen's egg incubated for six hours, after DUVAL. ak, Outer germ-layer; dz, yolk - cells ; dk, yolk-nuclei; dw, yolk-wall. in which numerous small nuclei enveloped in protoplasm (the me- rocytes), as at the final stages of the process of cleavage. Such free nuclei have also been demonstrated with perfect certainty in the marginal terri- tory of the yolk during the course of the formation of the germ-layers in Selachians, Teleosts, and Reptiles (KUPFFER, HOFFMANN, RUCKERT, STRAHL, SWAEN). The most accurate description of the yolk-nuclei has been given by RUCKERT for the eggs of Selachians (fig. 113). They are present in this case at the marginal portion of the germ-disc, embedded in the yolk in not inconsiderable numbers, and are remarkable for their size, sometimes reaching a diameter ten-fold as great as that of an ordinary nucleus (kl, k*). From the protoplasm enveloping the nucleus k* there proceeds a richly branched network of processes. In the interstices of the net are lodged yolk-elements (d) in great numbers, from the size of the ordinary yolk-plates down to the finest granules. The former are often in process of disintegration. One may conclude from this, as well as from other phenomena, that a vigorous consumption of deutoplasm is taking place at the margin of the germ. This deutoplasm is taken up as nutritive material by the protoplasmic net surrounding the nucleus, and employed by means of intra-cellular diges.tion for its growth. Consequently one also sees the yolk-nuclei in active increase. DEVELOPMENT OF CONNECTIVE SUBSTANCE AND BLOOD. 179 Toward the surface of the yolk small clusters of nuclei (fig. 113 k) arise out of the large deeper-lying yolk-nuclei. From these there are finally produced genuine cells of the germ (z), by the small nuclei surrounded by a layer of protoplasm detaching themselves from the yolk, as it were by an act of supplementary cleavage. merocytes thus on the one hand un- interruptedly take up nutritive ma- terial out of the yolk, and on the other continually surrender it in the form of cells to the germ-layers of the nascent embryo, they present an Since the Fig. 113. — Yolk-nuclei (merocytes) from Pristiurus, lying underneath the germ-cavity B, after HUCKEUT. 2, Embryonic cells ; k, superficial clear nuclei ; jfc1, deeper nuclei ; k*, marginal nuclei rich in chromatin, largely freed from tha surrounding yolk, in order to show the processes of the proto- plasmic mantle ; d, yolk-plates. ^important link between the latter and the yolk." (RuCKERT.) The views of investigators on the significance of the yolk- wall and of the merocytes enclosed in it are very divergent. Indeed there is unanimity only in this, that j^£^>lk:\vall c^on^ributes to the increase of the lower germ-layer by single cells becoming in- dependent and attaching themselves at the margin to the elements which already have an epithelial arrangement. On the other hand it appears less certain how far the yolk-wall is concerned in the formation of the blood. According to the observations of His, DISSE, RAUBER, KOLLMANN, RUCKERT, SWAEN, GENSCH, HOFFMANN, and others, it does share in this process during. a limited period of development in the case of Selachians, Teleosts, Reptiles, and Birds. In the Selachians the anterior margin of the germ-disc is the first to be metamorphosed into a vascular zone. RUCKERT could find here numerous and unequivocal indications that the previously described peculiar cell-elements of the yolk (merocytes) provided with large nuclei contribute to the formation of blood-islands, in "that they break up into clusters of small cells, detach themselves 180 EMBRYOLOGY. from the yolk-containing part of the lower germ-layer, and become- differentiated on the one hand into the migratory cells of the first blood-vessels, and on the other into the blood-corpuscles. RUCKERT further maintains that the material destined for the production of blood is supplemented by means of cells freshly cleft off from (he yolk. SWAEN remarks with the same positiveness, " Les premiers ilots sanguins se developpent aux depens des elements de Thypoblaste. Ces derniers constituent a la fin de ce developpement les parois de cavites j vasculaires closes et les cellules sanguines qui les remplissent." Likewise GENSCH makes the large cells in the yolk responsible for the formation of the blood in the case of the Bony Fishes. HOFF- MANN also finds in Reptiles that the blood and the endothelial wall of the vessels, as well as the spindle-shaped cells which lie between the vessels, are a product of the inner germ-layer, and that they appear at definite places of the germ-disc at a time when the middle germ-layer has not yet been formed in those regions. Finally, it is stated concerning the germ of the Chick that at the- end of the first day of incubation the cells in the yolk-wall have become very numerous, through the multiplication of the nuclei enclosed in the latter, and that afterwards the abundance of the cells diminishes. For part of the cells which have been formed by the active proliferation now detach themselves from the yolk- wall, get into the space between the outer and inner germ-lay ersr and there produce a third independent layer, which is continually increasing in thickness, whereas the remaining part becomes modi- fied into an epithelium of large cylindrical cells containing yolk- granules. This middle layer is judged by several investigators to- be an independent fundament of the germ, and has in this sense- been described by His as parablast, by DISSE and others as vascular layer, by RAUBER as desmohcemoblast, and by KOLLMANN as marginal germ or acroblast. All of these accounts need still more precise confirmation, since- they have often been called in question, even up to most recent times. Thus KOLLIKEB has always defended the position that not only the connective substances, but also the vessels and the- blood, are products of the middle germ-layer, and are generated by it in its peripheral regions. KASTSCHENKO, in his study of the Selachii, could not convince himself that the merocytes have special import- ance in the formation of blood and vessels, but was not, however,, DEVELOPMENT OF CONNECTIVE SUESTANCE AND BLOOP 181 willing to deny it. So much the more positively do WENKEBACH and ZIEGLEE, on the strength of their investigations on Teleosts, express themselves against the mode of blood-formation given by •GENSCH. According to ZIEGLER, the blood-corpuscles are developed in the blood-vessels of the embryonic body itself. The free nuclei •of the yolk, the merocytes, on the contrary, it is maintained, do not •share in the formation of embryonic tissues, but, in adaptation to the function of resorbing the yolk, undergo peculiar modifications, which " cause the frequently affirmed but never proved production •of blood-corpuscles [by them] to appear improbable." Under this condition of affairs, I must regard the question of the source of the cell-layer in which, in the region of the opaque area, the formation of blood takes place as not yet ready for final judgment. So far as regards the further changes, by means of which the cell-layer under consideration is converted into connective substance and blood, on the whole I subscribe, in this difficult field of in- vestigation, to KOLLIKER'S representation. At the end of the first day of incubation, the masses of cells which lie between the inner and the outer germ-layers arrange themselves in cylindrical or irregularly limited cords, which join themselves to- gether into a close-meshed network j they are the first fundaments J22thjof_jtlie_yj}s^lg^ tks blood. In the spaces of the net are to be found groups of indifferent cells, which afterwards become embryonic connective tissue, and which are the Substanzinseln (fig. 114) of authors. At the beginning of the second day of incubation, the solid funda- ments of the vessels become more distinct, in proportion as they become bounded superficially by a special wall, and acquire an internal cavity. The wall of the vessels is developed out of the most superficial cells of the cords, and is composed during the first days of incubation of a single layer of very much flattened polygonal elements, on account of which the first vessels of the embryo are often designated as endothelial tubes (fig. 114 and fig. 115 gw). The cavity of the vessel is probably formed by the penetration of fluid into the originally solid cord from its surroundings, thus forming the plasma of the blood, by which the cells are pressed apart and to the sides. The cells then constitute here and there thickenings of the wall, and project into the fluid-filled cavities as elevations of loosely united spherical elements (fig. 114, Blood-islands). Conse- 182 EMBRYOLOGY. Blood-island Wall of blood- vessel quently the vessels which are just becoming permeable are very irregular, since narrow places and wider ones, often provided with evagina- tions, alternate (fig. 114) with one another, and since the vessels are sometimes wholly excava- ted, fluid-filled, endothelial tubes, and sometimes re- main more or le.cs impassable, owing to the variously formed cell ag- gregates which project from the wall. The aggrega- tions of cells themselves are simply the centres wliere the formed com- ponents of the blood are pro- duced. The small spherical nucleated cells, which still en- close dark yolk- granules, be- come at first homoge n e o u s Blood-island Blood-vessel Wall of blood- vessel Substanzinseln Blood-vessel Fig. 114.— A portion of the vascular area of the germ disc of an embryo Chick, in which 12 primitive segments are developed, after DISSE. One sees the more darkly shaded blood-coui-ses, in which lie the "blood-islands," the centres whence the blood-corpuscles arise.. The clear spaces in the vascular network, the walls of which are formed of flat endotheliai cells, are the "substance-islands" (Substanzinselu). by the dissolution of the latter, and then, owing to the formation of the coloring matter of the blood in them, they take on a slightly yellowish color, which gradually becomes more intense. DEVELOPMENT OF CONNECTIVE SUBSTANCE AND BLOOD. 183 If one at this time examines a blastoderm which has been removed from the yolk, the zone in which the formation of blood takes place appears flecked with more or less intensely colored blood-red spots, some of which are roundish, others elongated, and others branched. The spots are known as the blood-points or blood-islands of the blasto- derm (fig. 114). From these formative areas the superficial cells now detach themselves and enter the blood fluid as the isolated red blood-corpuscles. Here, as well as in the blood-islands, they multiply by means of cell-division, during which the nucleus is metamorphosed into the well-known spindle-figure. As REMAK first showed, divisions of blood-cells are to be observed in the Chick in great numbers up to the sixth day of incubation, whereas they later become more rare, and then wholly disappear. Also in the case of Mammals and of Man (FoL) the first embryonic Fig. 115. — Cross section through a portion of the vascular area, after DISSE. ak, Outer, ik, inner germ-layer ; mi1, parietal, mk*} visceral lamella of the middle germ -layer; Ih, extra-embryonic body-cavity ; gw, wall of blood-vessel formed of endothelium ; bl, blood- cells ; g, ve blood-corpuscles, which are at this time provided as in the other Verte- brates with a genuine cell-nucleus, possess the power of division. In proportion as blood-corpuscles still further detach themselves from the blood-points, the latter become smaller and smaller, and finally disappear altogether ; but the vessels without exception then contain, instead of a clear fluid, red blood with abundant formed elements (fig. 115 bl). Subsequently there occur changes in the Substanzinseln which lead to the formation of embryonic connective substance. The germinal cells, at first spheroidal, separate farther from one another, at the same time secreting a homogeneous inter-cellular substance ; they become stellate (fig. 116 sp), and send out processes by means of which they are united into a network, which stretches all through the gelatinous secretion ; other cells apply themselves to the endo- thelial tubes of the vessels. 184 EMBRYOLOGY. After the formation of vessels and blood is completed, the territory of the area opaca, in which the process just described lake place, is sharply delimited at its periphery (fig. 117) in all meroblastic eggs, as well as in those of Mammals. For the close network of blood vessels ends abruptly at its periphery in a broad, circular, marginal vein (the vena or sinus terminalis, S.T.). Beyond the sinus terminalis, there is formed on the yolk neither blood nor blood-vessels. Nevertheless, the_twp primary germ-layers spread themselves out laterally over tin- yolk still farther, the outer layer more rapidly than the inner, until they have grown entirely around it. DEVELOPMENT OF CONNECTIVE SUBSTANCE AND BLOOD. 185 We must therefore now distinguish in the opaque area (Plate I., •fig. 2, page 213) two ring-like areas, the vascular area (gh) and the yolk-area (dh), area vasculosa and area viteUina. Since, moreover, sx, Pig 117. — Diagram of the vascular system of the yolk-sac at the end of the third day of incubation, after BALFOUR. The whole blastoderm has been removed from the egg and is represented as seen from below. Therefore what is really on the left appears on the right, and vice versd. The part of the area opaca in which the fine vascular network has been formed is sharply limited at the periphery by the sinus terminalis, and represents the vascular area ; outside of it lies the yolk-area. The immediate vicinity of the embryo is destitute of a vascular network, and is designated now, as at an earlier stage, by the name area pellucida. H Heart; AA, aortic arches; Ao, dorsal aorta, L.Of.A, left, R.Of.A, right vitelline artery; S.T, sinus terminalis ; L.Of, left, R.Of, right vitelline vein ; S. V, sinus venosus ; D. C, ductus Cuvieri ; S.Ca. V, superior, V.Ca, inferior cardinal vein. The veins are drawn in outline, the arteries in solid black. the area pellucida is still recognisable^ being traversed by only a few chief trunks of blood-vessels leading to the embryo, the body of the embryo is enclosed altogether by three zones or areas of the extr_$- embryonic part of the germ-layers. Up to the present we have pursued the formation of blood in the •opaque area. But how do the vessels in the body of the embryo 186 EMBRYOLOGY. itself arise ? Here, too, the uncertainty of our present knowledge is to be emphasised. According to the representation of His, to which KOLLIKER also adheres, and which the author himself has made the foundation of his account in the first edition of this Text-book, blood-vessels in the embryo are not independently formed, but take their origin from those already existing in the opaque area. According to His, the germ of the blood and connective substances, originally a peripheral fundament, makes its way from the opaque area at first into the- pellucid area, and from there into the body of the embryo itself, and is distributed everywhere in the spaces between the epithelial germ-layers and the products that have arisen by constriction from them. Into the spaces migrate first of all amoeboid cells, which send out in front of them branched processes ; on the heels of these- follow endothelial vascular shoots. At variance with the teachings of His are noteworthy investiga- tions of recent date, — not only the previously mentioned accounts of the manifold origin of the connective substances from the middle germ-layers^ but also particularly the more recent observations con cerning the independent origin of vessels and the endothelial sac of the heart in the body of the embryo itself. (RUCKERT, ZIEGLER, MAYER, RABL, KASTSCHENKO, and others.) For Selachian embryos the question, whether the repository of the material for the blood-vessels of the embryo is to be sought exclusively on the nutritive yolk, is, as RUCKERT remarks, to be answered definitely in the negative. The vessels arise in the embryo itself within the territory of the mesenchyme, from cells which are sometimes loosely, sometimes compactly arranged (RUCKERT, MAYER). RUCKERT derives the cells that form the vessels from two different sources, partly from the inner germ -layer of the yolk- wall, partly from the adjoining mesoblast, and their double origin appears to him a natural process of development, in so far as the two layers which bound the first vessels also furnish the material for their walls. To the same purport are the accounts concerning the formation of the endothelial sac of the heart. At first it consists of a rather irregular mass of cells, in which there appear separate cavities, that gradually unite to form a single cardiac space. The cell-material of the fundament of the heart is developed in situ ( RUCKERT, ZIEGLER, MAYER, RABL, and of the earlier investigators GOTTE, BALFOUR^ HOFFMANN) from the wall of the bounding germ-layers; however,. DEVELOPMENT OF CONNECTIVE SUBSTANCE AND BLOOD. 1ST uncertainty prevails as to whether the inner germ-layer alone, or the middle, or both, are concerned in the production of the fundament. When once the first vessels have been formed, they grow further independently, and continually give rise to new lateral branches by means of a kind of budding process. It can be observed that from the walls of vessels that are already hollow, solid, slender sprouts go out, which are formed of spindle- shaped cells, and by means of cross-branches join others to form a network. The youngest and most delicate of these sprouts consist of only a few cells arranged in a row, or indeed of only a single one, which, reposing upon the endothelial tube like a knob, is drawn out into a long protoplasmic filament. Into the solid sprout there now projects from the already completed vessel a small evagination, which gradually elongates and at the same time enlarges into a tube, the wall of which is formed of the separated cells of the funda- ment. The formation of blood-corpuscles no longer takes place in this process, all the cells of the sprout being employed to form the wall of the vessel. Since out of the vessels thus produced new sprouts are formed, and so on, the fundaments of the vessels spread them- selves out everywhere in the spaces between the germ-layers and the organs which have by constrictions been formed from them. There are, moreover, two different opinions about the manner in which the- sprouting takes place. Are the solid vascular shoots formed exclusively by growth of cells in the wall of the endothelial tube, or do neighboring con- nective-tissue cells take part in their formation ? While RABL holds to the proposition that new vascular endothelia always take their origin from such as- are already in existence, KOLLIKER, MAYEE, and RUCKERT make statements which appear to prove that the endothelial vascular tubes both continue to grow by themselves alone, and also to elongate through the participation of the connective-tissue cells of the surrounding tissue. In the preceding pages we have endeavored to show in detail how in Vertebrates the material of the cleavage- cells is differen- tiated into the separate fundamental or primitive organs. As such we must designate the outer and the inner germ-layers, the two middle germ-layers, and the mesenchyme or intermediate layer. In order properly to estimate at once the significance and the rdle ofjhese fundamental organs, we will glance at the final result of the process of development — propound the question, What organs and 188 EMBRYOLOGY. tissues take their origin in the separate germ-layers and the mesen- chyme? A definite answer to this question is possible, except on a few points concerning which the accounts of the different observers are still contradictory, and which therefore will be indicated by a mark of interrogation. From the outer germ-layer arise ; the epidermis, the epidermoidal organs, such as hair and nails, the epithelial cells of the dermal glands, the whole central nervous system with the spinal ganglia, the peripheral nervous system (?), the epithelium of the sensory •organs (eye, ear, nose), and the lens of the eye. The primary inner germ-layer is differentiated into ;— - 1. The secondary inner germ-layer, or entoblast ; 2. The middle germ -layers ; 3. The fundament of the chorda ; 4. The germ of the mesenchyme, which forms the intermediate layer. The entoblast (Parmdrlisenblatt) furnishes the epithelial lining of the whole intestinal canal and its glandular appendages (lung, liver, pancreas), the epithelium of the urinary bladder, and the taste buds. The middle germ-layers undergo extremely various metamorphoses .after having been differentiated into primitive segments and lateral plates. From the primitive segments are derived the striated, voluntary muscles of the body and a part of the mesenchyme. From the lateral plates arise the epithelium of the pleuroperitoneal cavity ; the epithelium of ovary and testis (primitive ova, mother- cells of the spermatozoa) ; in general, the epithelial components of the sexual glands and their ducts, as well as those of the kidney and ureter ; and finally mesenchymatic tissue. The fundament of the chorda becomes the chorda dorsalis, which in the higher Vertebrates is reduced, during later stages of development, to insignificant remnants. The mesencJiyme-germs^ which produce the intermediate layer, un- dergo manifold differentiations, for they spread themselves out in the body between the epithelial components as the intermediate mass. From them are derived, the multiform group of sustentative (con- nective) tissues (mucous tissue, fibrillar connective tissue, cartilage, bone), vessels (?) and blood (?), the lymphoid organs, the smooth, involuntary muscles of the vessels, of the intestine, and of various other organs. DEVELOPMENT OF CONNECTIVE SUBSTANCE AND BLOOD. HISTORY OF THE PARABLAST- AND MESENCHYME-THEORIES. The older investigators, as, for example, REMAK, grouped together all the cells which are inserted between the two primary germ-layers under the common name of the middle germ-layer, and assumed for them a common origin. To this conception His opposed in the year 1868 in " Die erste Ent- wicklung des Hiihnchens im Ei " his " parablast -theory" in which, influenced principally by histogenetic considerations, he distinguished two fundaments of different origin, an archiblastic and a parablastic. As archiblastic fundament he designated the part of the middle germ-layer which lies in the body of the embryo itself, the axial cord (Achsenstrang) and the animal and vegetative muscle-plates, and he made them arise by de- lamination from the primary germ-layers, and therefore ultimately from the embryonic cleavage-cells. He gave the name parablastto a peripheral fundament, lying originally outside the embryo, which is the source of all the connective substances, the blood and the vascular endothelium, and which grows from the margin, or more speci- fically from the opaque area, into the body between the archiblastic tissues. The division of the middle germ-layer into archiblast (chief germ) and parablast (accessory germ), proposed by His and carried out in several of his writings, found at the time no approbation, and encountered decided and successful opposition, especially on the part of HAECKEL. because the correct views contained in the doctrine were obscured and covered up by peculiar conceptions about the origin of the parablast. The parablast, it was claimed, is not derived from the egg-cell, but from the white yolk, a product of the granulosa-cells, which, according to the earlier teachings of His, penetrate into the primordial ovum in great numbers and become the white yolk-cells and the yellow spherules. But the granulosa-cells in turn, it was maintained, arise from the connective tissue (leucocytes) of the mother ; consequently after their migration into the egg they are capable of producing again only connective tissue and blood. His thought it was necessary to assume a fundamental difference between chief germ and accessory germ ; the former alone had experienced the influence of fertilisation, since it alone was descended from cleavage-cells, whereas the latter, since it issued from the white yolk (a derivative of the maternal con- nective tissue), was " purely a maternal dower." RAUBER, in a short communication, accepted the conclusions of His, in so far as he also assumed a common origin for blood and connective tissue, a special " baemo-desmoblast," but differed from him in that he derived them from the cleavage-cells. GOETTE (1874) is also to be mentioned in this connection, since he maintained that the blood is developed out of yolk-cells, which break up into clusters of smaller cells (Amphibia and Birds). Proceeding from other standpoints, and induced by observations on In- vertebrates, my brother and 1 were led in our Ccelom- Theory (1881) to a result similar to that of His, namely, that two entirely different structures had been hitherto embiaced under the expression middle germ-layer, and that it was- necepsary to introduce in the place of the old indefinite conception two new and more precise ones, " middle germ-layer in the restricted sense " and " mesen* chyme-germ'' But our conception, notwithstanding many points of agree- ment, took in detail a form very different from the doctrine of His. 190 EMBRYOLOGY. All fundaments of the animal body are derived from embryonic cells, which have been ] reduced from the egg-cell by the process of cleavage. The dis- tinction between middle germ-layer and mesenchyme-germ is to be sought in another direction than in that indicated by His. The middle germ-layers are sheets of embryonic cells, having an epithelial arrangement, which arise by a process of folding from the inner germ-layer, just as the latter does by a fold- ing of the blastula (compare the historical part of Chapter VII.). The mesen- chymatic germ, on the contrary, embraces cells, which have been individual 1 >/ detached from epithelial union in the inner germ-layer, and furnish the founda- tion for connective substance and blood ~by spreading themselves out in tlu- system of spaces between the epithelial germ-layers. After the appearance of the Coelom-Theory, His entered again into an explanation of his parablast-theory, and modified it in his paper, " Die Lehre vom Bindesubstanzkeim," in so far as he no longer laid weight on the question whether the fundament of the connective substance was derived from the segmented or the unsegmented germ. The theory of the double origin of the middle germ-layers, established by His and by us in different ways, met with opposition on the part of KOLLIKER who held to the older interpretation ; but by many others it was accepted ; attempts were made further to confirm and also to modify it by KUPFFER, DISSE, WALDEYEK, KOLLMANN, HEAPE, and others, who defended the existence of a special connective-tissue germ. KUPFFER and his followers furnished important observations concerning the presence of yolk-nuclei in a definite zone of the embryonic fundament, and their relation to the formation of blood in Fishes and Eeptiles. HOFFMANN and KUCKERT showed that the yolk-nuclei do not arise by free [spontaneous] formation of nuclei, but are descendants of the cleavage-nucleus. DISSE investigated the germ-wall of the Hen's egg. KOLLMANN named the cells which migrate out between the germ -layers poreuts (Poreuten), and the whole fundament the acroblast. Finally, WALDEYER endeavored to derive the connective-tissue germ from a special part of the cleavage-material, which he divided into an archiblast and a parablast. According to WALDEYER'S theory, the cleavage of the eggs of all those animals in which there is any blood and connective substance does not take place uniformly up to the end, but one must distinguish a primary and a secondary cleavage. " The former divides the egg, so far as it is in any way capable of cleavage, into a number of cells, which are ready for the production of tissues. These then form the primary germ-layers. A remnant of im- mature cleavage -cells (in the case of holoblastic eggs), or of egg-protoplasm, which is not yet converted into the cell-form (in rueroblastic eggs), is left remaining. Neither the immature cells, nor the protoplasm still unconverted into cells, enter for the present into the integrating condition of the germ- layers. On the contrary, it is only afterwards that there is effected on this material a further formation of cells, the secondary cleavage. The immature cells of the holoblastic eggs, over-loaded with nutritive yolk, divide them- selves, or, if one prefers, ' cleave ' themselves further, or the parts which are most richly provided with protoplasm constrict themselves off from the eggs, whereas the remnant of the nutritive material is consumed, — the unformed remnants of the protoplasm (germ-processes) of meroblastic eggs .become divided up into cells. The cell-material thus secondarily acquired DEVELOPMENT OF CONNECTIVE SUBSTANCE AND BLOOD. 191 migrates in between the primary germ-layers, and becomes blood and conneo tive substance." According to the recent investigations of KABL, ZIEGLEB, VAN WIJHE, RttCKERT, and others, the mesenchyme is produced from various regions of the middle germ-layer. A participation of the inner germ-layer in the forma- tion of the blood-vessels is rendered probable. SUMMARY. 1. Besides the four germ -layers, which have the form of epithelial lamellae, special germs are developed in the higher "Vertebrates for the sustentative substances and the blood, — the mesenchyme-germs. The latter together make up the intermediate layer. 2. The mesenchyme-germs arise by cells detaching themselves from epithelial union with the germ-layers, and penetrating as migratory cells into the fissure between the four germ -layers (the remnant of the original cleavage-cavity) and spreading themselves out in this space. 3. Germ-layers and mesenchyme-germ (intermediate layer) ex- nibit a difference in the method of their origin: the former are developed by foldings of the wall of the blastula, the latter by emi- gration of isolated cells from definite territories of the germ-layers. 4. Mesenchyme-germs arise from the wall of the primitive segment, from the cutis-plate, and at certain regions of the parietal and visceral lamellae of the middle germ-layer. 5. Blood-vessels are developed both in the body of the embryo itself, in a manner which still remains to be accurately determined, and also in the territory of the area opaca of meroblastic eggs. 6. The source of the cells from which the vessels and blood of the opaque area arise is at present a matter of controversy. 7. In the formation of vessels in the opaque area the following phenomena are to be regarded : — (a) The embryonic cells of the intermediate layer arrange themselves : — First into a network of cords, and Secondly into the substance -islands (Substanzinseln). (6) There are developed out of the cell-cords, at the same time with the secretion of the fluid portions of the blood, the endothelial wall of the primitive blood-vessels and their cellular contents, the blood-corpuscles (blood-islands), (c) The Substanzinseln become embryonic connective substance 192 EMBRYOLOGY. (d) The place where blood-vessels and connective substance at first arise in the opaque area is sharply limited at the- periphery by a circular vessel, the sinus terminalis. (e) Since the outer and the inner germ-layers further con- tinue to spread themselves out over the yolk after the- development of the intermediate layer, the body of the embryo becomes surrounded by three areas : — First by the area pellucida, Secondly by the va^ular area ending in the sinus- term inalis, Thirdly by the yolk-area, which is coextensive with the margin of the overgrowth. 8. The red blood-corpuscles of all Vertebrates possess in the earliest stages of development the power of increase by means- of division. The red blood-corpuscles of Mammals have at this time a nucleus. 9. The following table gives a survey of the fundamental organ* of the embryo, and the products of their further development : — I. Outer Germ-layer. Epidermis, hair, nails, epithelium of dermal glands, central nervous, system, peripheral nervous system, epithelium of sensory organs, the- lens. II. Primary Inner Germ-layer. 1. Entoblast, or secondary inner germ-layer. Epithelium of the alimentary canal and its glands, epitheliums of urinary bladder. 2. Fundament of the chorda. 3. The middle germ-layers. A. Primitive Segments. Transversely striped, voluntary muscles of the body. Parts- of the mesenchyme. B. Lateral Plates. Epithelium of the pleuroperitoneal cavities, the sexual cells- and epithelial components of the sexual glands and their outlets, epithelium of kidney and ureters. Parts of the* mesenchyme. 4. Mesenchyme- germ. Group of the connective substances, blood-vessels and blood , lymphoid organs, smooth involuntary muscles. LITERATURE. 193 LITERATURE. Afanasieff. TJeber die Entwickehmg der ersten Blutbahnen im Hiihner- embryo. Sitzungsb. d. k. Akad. d. Wissensch. Wien, matb.-nat. Cl. Bd. 53. Abth. 2, p. 560. 1866. Balfour. The Development of the Blood-vessels of the Chick. Quart. Jour Micr. Sci. Vol. XIII. 1873, p. 280. Disse. Die Entstehung des Blutes und der ersten Gefasse im Hiihnerei. Archiv f . mikr. Anat. Bd. XVI. 1879. Gasser. Der Parablast und der Keimwall der Vogelkeimscheibe. Sitzungsb. d. naturwiss. Gesellsch. Marburg. 1883. Gensch. Die Blutbildung auf dem Dottersack bei Knochenfischen. Archiv f. mikr. Anat. Bd. XIX. 1881. Gensch. Das secundare Entoderm und die Blutbildung beim Ei der Knochen- fische. Inaugural-Dissertation. Konigslerg 1882. Hatschek. Ueber den Schichtenbau von Amphioxus. Anat. Anzeiger. 1888. His, W. Der Keimwall des Hiihnereies und die Entstehung der parablas- tischen Zellen. Zeitschr. f. Anat. u. Entwicklungsg. 1876, p. 274. His, "W. Die Lehre vom Bindesubstanzkeim (Parablast). Eiickblick nebst kritischer Besprechung einiger neuerer entwicklungsgeschichtlicher Ar- beiten. Archiv f . Anat. u. Physiol. Anat. Abth. 1882. Klein. Das mittlere Keimblatt in seinen Beziehungen zur Entwicklung der ersten Blutgefasse und Blutkorperchen im Hiihaerembryo. Sitzungsb. d. k. Akad. d. Wissensch. Wien, math.-naturw. 01. Bd. 63. Abth. 2, p. 339. 1871. Kolliker, A. Ueber die Nichtexistenz eines embryonalen Bindegewebskeirns (Parablast). Sitzungsb. d. phys.-med. Gesellsch. Wurzburg 1884. Kolliker, A. Kollmann's Akroblast. Zeitschr. f. wiss. Zoologie. Bd. XKL 1885, p. 155. Kolliker, A. Die embryonalen Keimblatter und die Gewebe. Zeitschr. f. wiss. Zoologie. Bd. XL. 1884, p. 179. Kollmann, J. Der Kandwulst u. der Ursprung der Stiitzsubstanz. Archiv f . Anat. u. Physiol. Anat. Abth. 1884. Kollmann, J. Ein Nachwort. Archiv f. Anat. u. Physiol. Anat. Abth 1884. Kollmann, J. Der Mesoblast und die Entwicklung der Gewebe bei Wirbel. thieren. Biol. Centralblatt. Bd. III. Nr. 24, 1884, p. 737. Kollmann, J. Gemeinsame Entwicklungsbahnen der Wirbelthiere. Archiv f. Anat. u. Physiol. Anat. Abth. 1885. Kupffer. Ueber Laichen und Entwickelung des Ostseeherings. Jahresbericht der Comm. fur wissensch. Untersuchung der deutschen Meere. 1878. Lankester, Ray. Connective and Vasifactive Tissues of the Leech. Quart. Jour. Micr. Sci. Vol. XX. 1880. Mayer, P. Ueber die Entwicklung cles Herzens und der grossen Gefa'ssstiimme uei den Selachiern. Mittheil. a. d. zool. Station Keapel. Ed. VII. 1887, p. 338. Rabl, C. Ueber die Bildung des Herzens der Amphibien. Morphol. Jahrb. Bd. XII. 1886. Rabl, C. Theorie des Mesoderms. Morphol. Jahrb. Bd. XV. 1889. Rauber. Ueber den Ursprung des Blutes und der Bindesubstanzen. d. naturf. Gesellsch. Leipzig. 1877. 13 194 EMBRYOLOGY. Uuckert, J. Ueber den Ursprung des Herzendothels. Anat. Anzeiger. Jahrg. II. Nr. 12. 1887. Hiickert, J. Ueber die Entstehung der endothelialen Anlagen des Herzens und der ersten Gefassstamme bei Selachierembryonen. Biol. Centralblatt, Bd. VIII. 1888. Strahl. Die Anlage des Gefasssystems in der Keimschcibe von Lacerta agilis. Sitzungsb. d. Gesellsch. z. Beford. d. ges. Naturwiss. Marburg. 1883, p. 60. Strahl. Die Dottersackwand und der Parablast der Eidechsen. Zeitschr. f. wiss. Zoologie. Bd. XLV. 1887. Uskow. Die Blutgefasskeime und deren Entwicklung bei einem Hiihnerei. Mem. de 1'Acad. imper. des Sci. St. Petersbourg. 8er. VII. T. XXX\f. Nr. 4. 1887. Waldeyer. Archiblast und Parablast. Archiv f. mikr. Anat. Bd. XXII. 1883, pp. 1-77. Wenckebach. Beitrage zur Entwicklungsgeschichte der Knochenfischa Archiv f. mikr. Anat. Bd. XXVIII. 1886, p. 225. Ziegler. Der Ursprung der mesenchymatischen Gewebe bei den Selachiern. Archiv f. mikr. Anat. Bd. XXXII. 1888. Ziegler. Die Entstehung des Blutes bei Knochenfischembryonen. Archiv f. mikr. Anat. Bd. XXX. 1887. CHAPTER X. ESTABLISHMENT OF THE EXTERNAL FORM OF THE BODY. AFTER having investigated in the preceding chapters the fundamental organs of the body of vertebra ted animals, or the germ- layers, and their first important differentiations into neural tube, chorda, and primitive segments, as well as the origin of the blood and connective tissues, it will be our next undertaking to make ourselves acquainted with the development of the external form of the bod;/, and with the development of the embryonic membranes, the latter being intimately connected with the former. There exists an extraordinary difference in these respects between the lower and higher Vertebrates. When the embryo of an Amphioxus has passed through the first processes of development, it elongates, becomes pointed at both ends, and already possesses in the main the worm- like or fish-like form of the adult animal. But the higher we ascend in the series of Vertebrates, the more are the embryos, when they attain the stage of development corresponding to the Amphioxus embryo, unlike the adult animals : at this stage they assume very singular and strange forms, inasmuch as they become surrounded by peculiar envelopes and are provided with various appendages, which subsequently disappear. ESTABLISHMENT OF THE EXTERNAL FORM OF THE BODY. 195 The difference is referable, first of all, to the more or less extensive ^accumulation of nutritive yolk, the significance of which for the nascent organism is twofold. From a physiological point of view, the nutritive yolk is a rich source of energy which alone makes it possible for the embryologicul processes to take place in uninterrupted sequence, until at length an organism, with an already relatively high organisation, begins its independent existence. From a morphological point of view, on the other hand, the yolk plays the role of ballast, which exerts a restrictive and modifying influence on the direct and free development of those organs which are en- trusted with the reception and elaboration of it. Even at the very beginning of development we could see how the cleavage- process and the formation of the germ -layers were retarded, altered, and to a certain extent even suppressed by the presence of yolk. In what follows we shall again have occasion to point out the same thing, — how, owing to the presence of yolk, the normal formation of the intestinal canal and of the body can be attained only gradually and by a circuitous process. In the second place, the great difference which the embryos of Vertebrates present is produced by the medium in which the eggs undergo development. Eggs which, like those of water- inhabiting Vertebrates, are deposited in the water, are developed in a more simple and direct manner than those which, provided with a firm shell, are laid upon the land, or than those which are enclosed in the womb up to the time of the birth of the embryos. In the two latter cases the growing organism attains its goal only by very indirect ways. At the same time with the permanent organs there are also developed others which have no significance for the post-embryonic life, but which serve during the egg-stage of exist- ence either for the protection of the soft, delicate, and easily injured body, or for respiration, or for nutrition. These either undergo regressive metamorphosis at the end of embryonic life, or are cast oft' at birth as useless and unimportant structures. But inasmuch as they are developed out of the germ-layers, they are also properly to be regarded as belonging immediately to the nascent organism — as being its embryonic organs, and as such they too are to be treated in morphological descriptions. The extensive material which has to be mastered in this con- nection I shall present grouped into two parts. In the first part we shall inquire how the embryo overcomes the 196 EMBRYOLOGY. obstacle which it encounters in the presence of the yolk and acquires its ultimate In the second and likewise more extensive part we must concern ourselves more minutely with the embryonic enveloping structures and appended organs, which subserve various purposes. The collection of yolk-material disturbs the course of development least in the case of the Amphibia. The latter therefore stand, as it were, midway between Amphioxus with direct development and the remaining Verte- brates, and constitute a transition between them. In the Amphibia the yolk shares in the process of Fig. 118. — Diagrammatic longitudinal section through the embryo of a Frog, after GOETTE, from BALFOUR. nc, Neural tube ; x, communication of the same with blastopore and coelenteron (al) ; yk, yolk-cells ; m, middle germ-layer. For the sake of simplicity the outer germ-layer is represented as if composed of a single layer of cells. cleavage ; after the close of this process it is found ac- cumulated for the most part in the large yolk-cells which form the floor of the blastula (fig. 45) ; at the time of the differentiation into gerrn- layers it is taken up into the coelenteron, which it almost completely fills (fig. 47); after the formation of the body- sacs the large yolk-cells lie in a similar manner in the- ventral wall of the intestine proper (fig. 118 yk). Here they are in part dissolved and employed for the growth of the remaining parts of the body, in part they share directly in the formation of the epithelium of the ventral wall of the intestine. In consequence of the presence of the great accumulation of yolk- cells, the Amphibian embryo acquires a shapeless condition at a time when the Amphioxus larva has already become elongated and fish- like. The body, which is spherical during gastrulation, later becomes egg-shaped, owing to its elongation. Thereupon the head-end and the tail-end begin to be established at the two poles as small eleva- tions (figs. 118 and 80). The middle or trunk-part lying between the latter becomes somewhat incurved along its dorsal region, in ESTABLISHMENT OF THE EXTERNAL FORM OF THE BODY. 197 which neural tube, chorda, and primitive segments are developed, so that the cephalic and caudal elevations become joined by means of a concave line. The ventral side of the trunk-region, on the con- trary, is greatly swollen and bulges out ventrally and laterally like a hernia, since it is filled with yolk-cells. This swelling is therefore called thejyoJk-sac. In the further progress of development the embryo continually acquires a more fish-like shape. The anterior and the posterior ends of the body, especially the latter, increase greatly in length, and the middle of the trunk becomes thinner, for with the consump- tion of the yolk-material the yolk-sac becomes smaller and finally disappears altogether, its walls being incorporated into the ventral wall of the intestine and that of the body. The interferences in the normal course of development become greater in the same ratio as the yolk increases in amount, as it does in the case of the meroblastic eggs of Fishes, Reptiles, and Birds. With the latter the yolk is no longer broken up into a mass of yolk-cells, as in the case of the Amphibia ; it participates in the process of cleavage, but only to a slight extent, inasmuch as nuclei make their way into the layer of yolk which is adjacent to the germ, and, sur- rounded by protoplasm, continue to increase in number by division. The gastrula-form is altered until it becomes unrecognisable; only a small part of its dorsal surface consists of cells, which are arranged into the two primary germ-layers, whereas the whole ventral side, where in the Amphibia the yolk-cells are found, is an unsegmented yolk-mass. Thus we acquire in the case of the Vertebrates mentioned a peculiar condition ; the embryo, if we regard the yolk as not belonging to the body, appears to be developed from layers that are .spread out flat instead of from a cup-like structure (Plate I., fig. 1, page 213). Moreover we see even a greater distinction effected between the dorsal and ventral surfaces of the egg during develop- ment than was the case with the Amphibians. The fundaments of all important organs, the nervous system, the chorda, the primitive segments (Plate I., figs. 2, 8), are at first produced exclusively on the former, whereas on the ventral side few and unimportant changes only are to be observed. These consist principally in the extension of the germ-layers, which spread out farther ventrally, grow over the yolk- mass (Plate I., figs. 2-5), and form around it a closed sac consisting of several layers. This circumcrescence of the unsegmented volk by the germ-layers is accomplished, on the whole, very slowly, the more 198 EMBRYOLOGY, voluminous the accumulated yolk-material, the more time it requires r thus, for example, in the case of Birds it is completed at a very late stage of development, when the embryo has already attain&d a high state of perfection (Plate I., fig. 5). In the case of meroblastic eggs, the part of the germ-layers on which the first fundaments of the organs (neural tube, chorda, primitive segments, etc.) appear has been distinguished as the embryonic area from the remaining part, or the extra-embryonic area. The distinction is both fitting and necessary : but the names might have been more appropriate than " embryonic and extra-embryonic," since obviously everything that arises from the egg-cell, and con- sequently even that -E»» which originates in the extra-embryonic area, must be rec- koned as belonging to the embryo. The differentiation into two areas persists in the course of further development, and be- comes expressed still more sharply (fig. 119). The embryonic area, by means of the folding of its flattened layers into tubesr alone forms the elongated, fish-like body which all Vertebrates ,V first exhibit ; the extra-embryonic area, on the contrary, becomes a sac filled with yolk (ds), which, like an enormous hernia, is united to the embryo (Em) by means of a stalk (st) attached to its belly,, sometimes even while the embryo is still remarkably small. We must now explain more minutely the details of the processes of development which take place in this connection : first the metamorphosis of the flattened embryonic area i^to the fish-like embryonal body, and secondly the formation of the yolk-sac. In the presentation we shall adhere chiefly to the Hen's egg, but for the time being we shall leave out of consideration the formation of the embryonic membranes. The body of the Chick is developed by a folding of the flattened layers, and by the constricting off of the tubular structures thus formed Fig. 119. — Advanced embryo of a Shark (Pristiurus), after BALFOUR Em, Embryo ; ds, yolk-sac ; st, stalk of the yolk-sac ; av, arteria vitellina ; vv, vena vitellina. ESTABLISHMENT OF THE EXTERNAL FORM OF THE BODY. 199 from the area pellucida. The beginning of the process of folding is recognisable upon the surface of the blastoderm by means of certain furrows, the marginal grooves (Grenzrinnen) of His. These appear earlier in the anterior than in the posterior region of the embryonic fundament, in correspondence with the law previously enunciated, according to which the anterior end of the body anticipates in development the posterior end. At first that part of the embryonic fundament which is destined to become the head is marked off by means of a cres- centic groove (fig. 120). In the case of the Chick this is indicated during the first day of incubation, at a time when the first trace of the nervous system becomes visible. It lies immediately in front of the curved anterior end of the medullary ridges, with its concavity directed backward. At a later stage the embryonic area is marked off laterally. In the case of the embryo Seen from Fig. 120._ Surface-view of the area pellucida of . . „ , t,n . ,., a blastoderm of 18 hours, after BALFOUR. the surface m fig. 121, in which Iu frout, of the priniitive groove (pr) lies the the neural tube is already partly closed and segmented into three brain-vesicles, and in which six pairs of primitive segments are laid down, there may be re- cognised at some distance from these primitive segments two dark streaks, the two lateral marginal grooves. They become less distinct in passing from before backward, and wholly disappear at the end of the primitive groove. Finally, the tail-end of the embryo is marked off by the posterior marginal groove, which like the anterior is crescentic, but has its concavity directed towrard the head. i'n this manner a small part of the germ-layers^ which alone is required for the construction of the permanent body, is separated by a medullary furrow (me), with the medullary ridges (A). These diverge behind and fade out on either side in front of the primitive groove ; anteriorly, on the contrary, they are continuous with each other, and form «n arch behind a curved line, which represents the anterior marginal groove. The secoud curved line, lying in front of and concentric with the first, is the beginning of the atuniotic fold. 200 EMBRYOLOGY. continuous marginal furrow from the much more extensive extra- embryonic area, which serves for the formation of evanescent organs like the yolk-sac and the em- bryonic membranes. The marginal grooves are formed by the infold - ing of the outer germ-layer and the parietal middle layer, which are together called the somatopleure, and in such a manner that the ridge of the original small fold is directed downward toward the yolk (Plate I., fig. 8 sf). The space en- closed by the two folded layers is the marginal groove (gr). As we have distinguished on the latter several regions, which are developed at different times, so must we here distinguish the corresponding folds, and we consequently speak of a head/old, a tail- fold, and the two lateral folds. The headfold appears, first of all, even on the first, but more distinctly 011 the second, day of in- cubation. By means of it the head-end of the embryonal fundament . 121. — Blastoderm of the Chick, incubated 33 hours, after DUVAL. One sees the pellucid area, hf, surrounded by a portion of the opaque area, df. The fundament of the iiervous system is closed anteriorly and segmented into three brain-vesicles, hbl, l(L>", lib3; behind, the medullary fold mf is still open. On either side of it lie six primitive segments, us. The posterior end of the s formed and separated from fundament of the embryo is occupied by the primitive the extra-embryonic part streak with the primitive groove, pr. Qf tlie germ -layers. At the moment of its origin it is turned directly downward toward tho yolk; but the more it enlarges, — whereby the anterior marginal ESTABLISHMENT OF THE EXTERNAL FORM OF THE BODY. 201 groove is deepened into a pit, — the more its ridge is turned back- wards. Two diagrammatic longitudinal sections, one of which is shown in fig. 122, the other on Plate I., fig. 11, may serve to illustrate this process. In fig. 122 there is shown, projecting above the otherwise smooth flat surface of the germ-layers, a small protuberance, which encloses the anterior end of the neural tube (N.C) and the simultaneously forming intestinal tube (Z>), and which has arisen by the formation of the fold F.So. The upper sheet of the fold, by directing itself JV.C F.So. Tig, 122. — Diagrammatic longitudinal section through the axis of an embryo Bird, after BALFOUR. The section represents the condition when the head-fold has begun, but the tail-fold is still wanting. F.So, Head-fold of the somatopleure ; F.Sp, head-fold of the splauchnopleure, forming at Sp the lower wall of the front end of the mesenteron ; D, cavity of the fore gut ; pp, pleuroperitoiieal cavity ; Am, fundament of the anterior fold of the amnion ; N.C, neural tube ; Ch, chorda; A, B, G, outer, middle, inner germ-layer, everywhere distinguished by different shading; Ht, heart. backwards, furnishes the ventral wall of the cephalic elevation ; the lower sheet forms the floor of the marginal groove. In the second figure, in which there is represented a diagrammatic longitudinal section through an older embryo, the bead-fold JJcf1) ha«$ extended still farther backward. The head has thereby become longer, since its under surface has increased in consequence of the advance in the process of folding. Whoever desires to make this process, which is very important for the comprehension of the construction of animal forms, clearer and more intelligible, may do so with the help of an easily constructed model. Let him stretch out his left hand on a table, and spread flat over the back of it a cloth, which is to represent the blastoderm ; then let him fold in the cloth with his right hand by tucking it a little way under the points of his left fingers. The artificially pro- duced fold corresponds to the head-fold previously described. The 202 EMBRYOLOGY. points of the fingers, which by the tucking under of the cloth have- received a covering on their lower sides, and which project above the otherwise flattened cloth, are comparable to the cephalic eleva- tion. In addition we can represent the backward growth of the head-fold by tucking the cloth still farther under the left fingers toward the wrist. The hinder end of the embryo develops in the same manner as the front end, only somewThat later (compare fig. 11, Plate I.). Corre- sponding to the posterior marginal groove (gr), the tail-fold is so formed that its ridge is directed forward and that it grows toward the head-fold. Where in surface-views of the blastoderm the lateral marginal grooves are to be seen (fig. 121), one recognises on cross sections the 1'iferal folds (Pluto I., fig. 8 */'). They grow at first directly from above downwards, thus producing the lateral walls of the trunk.^ Afterwards their margins bend somewhat toward the median plane (Plate I., fig. 9 sf), thereby approaching each other, and in this way gradually draw together to form a tube (Plate I., fig. 10). By their infolding the trunk acquires its ventral wall. In order to avoid misconceptions, let it be further remarked that only at the beginning of their formation are head-, tail-, and lateral folds somewhat separated from one another, but that when they are more developed they are merged into one another, and thus are only parts of a sin f/k fold, which encloses the fundament of the embryo on all sides. As the separate parts of this fold increase, they grow with their bent margins from in front and from behind, from right and from left, toward one another, and finally come near together in a small territory, which corresponds approximately with the middle of the surface of the embryo's belly, and is designated on the figure of the cross section through this region (Plate I., fig. 10) by a ring-like line (hn). Thus a small tubular body is formed (Plate L, fig. 3), which lies upon the extra-embryonic area of the blastoderm and is united to it by means of a hollow stalk (hn). The stalk marks the place where the margins of the folds, growing toward one another from all sid. s, have met, but a complete constricting off of the embryonic territory from the extra-embryonic does not take place. We can also represent these conditions, if, in the previously men- tioned model, we in addition fold in the cloth that covers the tips of the fingers along the sides of the hand and the wrist, and then carry the circular fold thus artificially formed still farther under,, even to the middle of the palm. Then the cloth forms around the- ESTABLISHMENT OP THE EXTERNAL FORM OF THE BODY. 205 hand a tubular sheath, which is continuous at one place by means of a connecting cord with the flattened remaining portion of the cloth. A process similar to the externally visible one just described, by which the lateral and ventral walls of the body are produced from the sheet-like fundaments, takes place at the same time within the embryo in the splanchnopleure. There are developed from it, as from the somatopleure, an anterior, a posterior, and two lateral intestinal folds. First, at the time when the head is differentiated (fig. 122), the part of the splanchnopleure corresponding to it (F./Sp.) is folded together into a tube, the so-called cavity of the/ore gut or head-gut (D). The same process repeats itself on the third day of incubation at the posterior end of the embryonal fundament, where, upon the appearance of the caudal part (Plate I., fig. 11), there is formed within it and out of the splanchnopleure the cavity of the kind gut. Both parts of the intestine at first terminate with blind ends directed toward the outer surface of the body. At the head-end the mouth-opening is still wanting, at the posterior end the anus. When, however, one raises the blastoderm with the nascent embryo from the yolk, and examines it from the under side, the anterior and posterior portions of the intestinal canal exhibit openings (vdpf and hdpf). through which one can look from the yolk-side into the blind-ending cavities. One of these is called the anterior, the other the posterior, intestinal portal or intestinal entrance.(Pl&te I., fig. 11 vdpf and hdpf). Between the two portals the middle region of the intestinal canal remains for a long time as a leaf -like fundament. Then by its becoming somewhat bent downwards (Plate I., figs. 9 and 2) there arises under the chorda dorsalis an intestinal yroove (U8 EMBRYOLOGY. product of the extra-embryonic part of the ectoderm and of the parietal mesoderm united with it. The two infoldings, which lie near to each other, have opposite w.c Fig. 125.— Diagrammatic longitudinal section through the axis of an embryo Bird, after BALFOUR. The section represents the condition when the head-fold is already formed, but the tail-fold ia still wanting. F.So, Head -fold of the somatopleure ; F.Sp, head-fold of the splanchnopleure, forming at Sp the floor of the anterior part of the intestine. For the remaining references see fig. 122, p. 201. directions (fig. 125). While the head-fold (F.So) advances with its margin toward the yolk, the anterior fold of the amnion (Am), sepa- rated from it by the marginal groove, rises externally above the me Fig. 126.— Diagrammatic longitudinal section through the posterior end of an embryo Chick at the time of the formation of the allantois, after BALFOUR. ep, me., hy, Outer, middle, and inner germ-layers ; ch, chorda ; Sp.c, neural tube ; n.e, neurenteric canal ; p.a.g, post-anal gut ; pr, remains of the primitive streak foMetl toward the ventral" side ; al, allantois ; on, point where the anus will be formed ; p.c, perivisceraJ cavity ; am, amnion ; so, gomatopleure ; sp, splanchuopleure. plane of the blastoderm. At the time when the head is being formed, the amnion enlarges rather rapidly (Plate I., fig. 1 1 vaj), and grows over and around the head in a cap-like fold, the rim of which is directed backwards. At the end of the second day of incubation it already THE FCETAL MEMBRANES Or REPTILES AND BIRDS. 209 covers the anterior part of the head like a thin transparent veil, and is therefore called the cephalic sheath. In like manner, but at a somewhat later stage, there arise at the tail-end and at both sides of the embryo the posterior and lateral folds of the amnion. The posterior fold is still very inconspicuous even at the time when the head is covered with the veil-like pellicle (Plate I., fig. 11 haf). It enlarges slowly, and under the name of caudal sheath covers over the posterior end of the body (fig. 126 am). The lateral folds of the amnion are elevated externally to the lateral marginal grooves (fig. 127 om), and project in the opposite direction from those lateral folds by the bending in of which the lateral and ventral walls of the embryo are produced. By this means the rim 14 210 EMBRYOLOGY. of the fold is carried farther and farther from the sj ianchnopleure (sp), which remains spread out flat over the yolk. In this way the extra-embryonic part of the body-cavity, or the cavity of the blasto- derm (KOLLIKER), increases in extent in the vicinity of the embryo. When the lateral folds of the amnion have grown up to the dorsal surface of the embryo (Plate I., fig. 9 *q/), they begin, by the bending over of their edges medianwards, to form the so-called lateral sheaths. Inasmuch as the folds of the amnion, which are called by special names, become, when they are in full development, continuous, and are only parts of a single ring-like fold, the embryo eventually becomes surrounded on all sides as though by a high wall. With further enlargement, the amniotic sheaths then bend together over the back of the embryo from in front and behind, and from the right and the left (Plate I., figs. 2, 3, and 10, a/, vaf, haf), come together with their edges in the median plane, and then fuse with each other along a line, the amniotic suture, which closes from in front back- wards (Plate I., fig. 10), except that at one very small place near the tail-end the closing is interrupted for a considerable time, and a small opening is preserved. The fusion of the amniotic folds takes place in the same manner as the fusion of the medullary folds described on page 79. Each fold (Plate I., figs. 3 and 10) consists of two layers^ an inner and an outer one, which are continuous at the margirisTof^ the folds, and are separated by a fissure, which is a portion of the extra-embryonic boay-cavity. At the amniotic suture the corresponding layers of the folds of both sides fuse, and hand in hand with this a separa- tion of the inner from the outer layers takes place (Plate I., fig. 4). As a result of this there have now arisen two envelopes over the back of the embryo, an inner and an outer one, the amnion (A) and the serosa (S). The amnion is the product of the inner layer of the folds (Plate I., fig. 10 ifb). It forms a sac which immediately after its origin is closely applied about the embryo, and which encloses a very small amniotic cavity filled with fluid. The serous membrane (serosa), which is derived from the outer layer of the folds (afb, Plate I., fig. 10), lies as a very delicate trans- parent membrane closely applied to the amnion, and thus encloses the embryo in still another envelope. If we now glance back at the conditions described in the previous chapter, and compare the development of Fishes with that of Reptiles THE FCETAL MEMBRANES OF REPTILES AND BIRDS. 211 and Birds, it is to be seen that a considerable complication has arisen in the case of the latter. Whereas in Fishes the extra-embryonic a-rea of the somatopleure becomes exclusively the dermal yolk-sac, in Eeptiles and Birds two sacs have arisen out of it by a process of folding. The influences producing this folding appear to be clear. Since the egg is enclosed in firmly applied envelopes, the embryonic body, when it is formed by the folding together of the germ-layers, cannot rise from the yolk-sac ; it therefore comes to lie in a depres- sion of the latter. There is the more reason for the occurrence of this because the embryo at the beginning of development is exces- sively small in comparison with the yolk, and because the yolk-layers immediately underlying it become liquefied and absorbed. With the sinking of the body into the yolk (Plate I., figs. 2 and 3), the parts which in Fishes become the simple dermal yolk-sac (Plate I., figs. 6 and 7) fold in around it on all sides as amniotic folds, and enclose it the more completely the deeper it sinks into the yolk. The preceding account of the development of the amnion is made some- what schematic in a single point. That is to say, the anterior fold of the amnion is developed so early, that the middle germ-layer has not yet been able to spread out as far as the anterior part of the embryonic area. The in- folding, therefore, in this region involves only the outer and inner germ-layers, which are still closely united. This condition is changed somewhat later, when the middle germ-layer has grown into the region of the anterior fold of the amnion, and has there split into a visceral and a parietal layer. The process has not yet been followed out in detail in series of longitudinal sections. But at all events we must assume that the entoblast, which is united with the visceral middle layer, retracts from the anterior fold of the amnion and again spreads out flat, as is represented in diagrammatic figure 11 (Plate I.). In this manner the anterior amniotic fold, which in the meantime has become greatly enlarged, now consists of the outer germ-layer and the parietal middle layer, as is the case from the beginning with the subsequently arising posterior And lateral folds of the amnion. We now have to enter still more particularly upon the further relations of amnion and serosa. Up to the end of embryonic development the amniotic sac remains in continuity, with a small region on the ventral side of the embryo, which is called the xdermal umbilicus. In figs. 3, 4, 5, and 10 (Plate I.) this place is indicated by means of a circular line (hn). Here the primitive layers of the body-wall are continuous with the corresponding layers of the amnion, as, for instance, the epidermis of the body with an epithelial layer lining the amniotic cavity. The dermal umbilicus of Reptiles and Birds corresponds therefore with 212 EMBRYOLOGY. the structure of the same name in embryo Fishes (Plate I., fig. 7 7m),. for it is at this point that the dermal yolk-sac is continuous by means- of its stem-like elongation with the walls of the belly. As in the Fishes, it surrounds an opening (Plate I., figs. 7 and 5 hn) which unites the portion of the body-cavity lying within the embryo (Ik1} with the extra-embryonic part lying between the embryonic membranes (lh2). Furthermore, the stalk of the yolk-sac or vitelline duct, which is continuous with the embryonic intestine, and which i& indicated in the above-mentioned figures of Plate I. by the small circle dn, passes through the opening. The amniotic sac affords an additional special advantage to the embryos of Reptiles and Birds in that an albuminous saline fluid, the liquor amnii, collects in its cavity. In it the delicate, easily injured embryo composed of plastic cells floats, as it were, and is able to- move. The amniotic sac is small at the beginning of its development, but enlarges with each day of incubation, since it keeps pace with the growth of the embryo and encloses a larger and larger amount of amniotic fluid. At the same time its wall becomes contractile. Certain cells in its somatic mesoderm develop into contractile fibres, which in the Chick give rise to rhythmic movements from the fifth day of incubation onward. One can observe these while the egg-shell remains intact,, if one holds the egg toward a source of blight light, and for this purpose makes use of the ooscope constructed by PREYER. In this manner it can be determined that the amnion executes about ten contractions in a minute, which, beginning at one pole, proceed to- the opposite end, like the contractions of a worm. Thus the amniotic fluid is set in motion, and the embryo oscillates or rocks regularly from one end to the other. The rocking of the embryo, as PREYER expresses it, becomes more and more obvious in the later days of incubation, since the contractions of the amnion become more- energetic. The serosa (S] is a wholly transparent, easily ruptured membrane,, which is closely applied to the vitelline membrane. It consists of two thin cell-layers, which take their origin from the outer germ-layer and the parietal middle layer, and like them are distinguished by blue and red lines in the diagram. The serous membrane is origin- ally present as a separate structure only in the region of the amnion and of the embryo (Plate I., fig. 4), as far as the body-cavity is formed in the middle germ-layer. It then enlarges to the same extent as the- fact p. 2f5 PLATE ! Georrie Alle/t d CVl™ THE FCETAL MEMBRANES OF REPTILES AND BIRDS. 213 yolk becomes overgrown and as the vascular area extends farther downwards. Parietal and visceral middle layers separate more and more from each other, until finally (in the Chick toward the end of incubation) a separation results over the entire periphery of the yolk- sphere. Figs. 3, 4, and 5, Plate I., show stages in this process. In the last figure, which represents the condition on about the seventh day of incubation, the extra-embryonic part of the body-cavity has already become very considerable ; the serous envelope is, with the exception of a small place at the vegetative pole of the yolk, every- where formed as a separate structure. In connection with this the wall of the yolk-sac also becomes changed. Whereas at the beginning of the overgrowth it embraces for a considerable distance all the germ-layers, after the separation of the serosa it is composed exclusively of entoderm and the visceral middle layer. EXPLANATION OF THE FIGURES ON PLATE I. Figs. 1-5 are diagrammatic representations of cross and longitudinal sections through the Hen's egg at different stages of incubation. They are intended to illustrate how the body of the Chick is developed out of the embryonic funda- ment, and how the yolk-sac, the amnion, the serosa, and the allantois arise out of the extra-embryonic area of the germ-layers. For the sake of clearness the embryonic fundament, and later the embryo, are represented much too large in relation to the yolk. In order more easily to distinguish the different parts from one another -different colors have been selected for them. The yolk is represented in yellow, the entoderm green, the outer germ-layer blue, and the middle germ- layer, together with the mesenchyme, red. The black dots indicate the limit to which the outer and inner germ-layers have grown over the yolk in the different stages ; the red dots mark the boundary for the time being of the middle germ-layer, which after the development of the blood-vessels ends in the sinus terminalis. The references apply to a,ll of tie figures. «fr, Outer germ-layer (blue). mw, Medullary ridges or folds. .V, Nenral tube. of, Araniotic fold. dff, Vitelline duct. al, Allantois. ds, Intestinal sac. dn, Intestinal umbilicus. vaj, haf, sa/, Anterior, posterior, and lateral mk, Middle ger,,' -layer (red). amniotic folds. ink ', Parietal lamella of the same or parietal A, Amnion. ah, Amniotic cavity. £, Serous membrane (Seroea). J,n, Dermal umbilicus. .*/, Lateral folds. kf\ kf, Head-fold ; i&2, Visceral lamella of the same or visceral middle layer. st, Lateral limit of the same, sinus terminalis, marginal vein. dm, mn, Dorsal and ventral mesenteries. th, Body-cavity. Ih1, Embryonic, /A2, extia- embryonic part of the same. 214 EMBRYOLOGY. Fig. 1. — Cross section through a Hen's egg on the second day of incubation. The germ-layers are spread out flat over the yolk ; the middle one is less extensive than the other two. The first blood-vessels have developed, and terminate with the marginal vein (s£) at the edge of the middle germ-layer. One now distinguishes therefore the vascular area, which extends to the red dotted line (.<#)> and external to it the yolk-area (dh\ which terminates with the black dotted line (ur)t the edge of overgrowth of the outer and inner germ-layers. Fig. 2. — Cross section through a Hen's egg on the third day of incubation. The outer and inner germ -layers are spread out over half of the yolk. The yolk-area (dh) terminates with the black dotted line (ur), the edge of overgrowth. The middle germ-layer, with the vascular area, which is now well developed,, has also grown over the yolk as far as the line st (the sinus terminalis). In the middle germ-layer the body-cavity has become distinct in the embryonic region (lh]) and in its immediate vicinity (77r), the parietal (ra/i1) and visceral middle layers (m7t-) having separated from each other. The embryonic fundament begins to be constricted off from the extra- embryonic part by a process of folding and to constitute the trunk. The lateral folds (sf) have grown downwards for a certain distance, thus giving rise to- the lateral walls of the trunk, whereas ventrally the body is still open. Corre- sponding to these lateral folds (*/), the lateral intestinal folds ( only in the re- stricted sense in which it has been employed in this chapter, and in other cases to speak of a vi lions membrane or chorion only. The forma- tion of the pla- centa presents in its details important mo- difications. Fig. 135a.— TTterus of a Cow laid open, in the middle of the period of TVi« T}im gestation. From BALFOUR, after COLIN. V, Vagina ; U, uterus ; Ch, chorion ; C", cotyledons of the uterus ; C*, foetal nants, in which cotyledons. , , , , the blastoder- mic vesicle is drawn out into two tips, as in the Pig, present a special typ e (fig. 135a). On their chorion (Ch) have been developed very many small foatal placentae (C2), which here are also called cotyledons. The number of the latter is ex- ceedingly vari- able in the different spe- cies, from sixty to one hundred in the Sheep and Cow, and only from five to six in the Doe. They are united with Fig. 135b.— Cotyledon of a Cow, the foetal and maternal parts half detached from each other. After COLIN, from BALFOUR. u, Uterus ; C", maternal part of the cotyledon (placenta uterina) ; Ch, chorion of the embryo ; C3, foatal part of the cotyledon (chorion frondosum or placenta foetalis). THE FCETAL MEMBRANES OF MAMMALS. 23f> corresponding thickenings of the uterine mucous membrane, the placentae uterinse ((71), though only in a loose manner, so that a little pulling is sufficient to produce a separation, and to draw the chorionio villi out of the depressions which serve for their reception, as one draws the hand out of a glove. In fact, in the preparation which serves as the basis of our figure 135a the cotyledons of offspring and mother (C2 and (71) are separated from each other, since the uterus ( U) has been opened by means of an incision and drawn back from the chorion (Ch) for a little distance. Figure 135b shows a single cotyledon of figure 135a somewhat larger than the natural size. The wall of the uterus (u) is drawn back a little from the chorion (Ch). As a result of this, the maternal (C1) and foetal parts (C2) of the cotyledon are partially separated from each other. On the placenta uterina (Cl) one perceives many small pits, on the placenta fcetalis (C2) the closely packed dendritically branching chorionic villi, which have been withdrawn from the pits. As the diagrammatic section figure 136 teaches, the foetal and maternal tissues abut immediately on each other. The villi are covered with flattened cells, and the depressions of the mucous membrane are lined with cylindrical cells ; the latter develop within them granules of fat and albumen ; they disintegrate in part, and thereby contribute to the formation of a milky fluid, the so-called uterine milk, which can be pressed out of the placenta uterina and serves for the nutrition of the foetus. It is to be noticed also that in the Ruminants the uterine glands have openings on the mucous membrane only between the cotyledons. In all other Mammals that are provided with a placenta the intergrowth of the foetal and maternal tissue is still more intimate. At the same time there is formed in this way such a close union, that a separation of the chorion without injury to the mucous membrane of the uterus is now no longer possible. At birth therefore a more or: less considerable superficial layer of the mucous membrane of the uterus is cast off with the foetal placenta. The part that is cast off is called the caducous membrane, or the decidua. In accordance with HUXLEY'S proposal, all Mammals in which, in consequence of the special growth of the placenta, such a membrane is formed are now grouped together as Mammalia deciduata, or briefly Deciduata, in contradistinction to the remaining Mammals — the Inchciduata, the formation of whose placentae has just been discussed. 236 EMBRYOLOGY. In the Mammalia with a decidua we must distinguish Zi/» sub- types of placenta, a ring-like and a disc-like, a placenta zonaria and & placenta discoidea. The placenta zonaria is characteristic of the Carnivora. The blastodermic vesicle in this case generally has the shape of a cask. With the exception of both poles, which retain a smooth surface, the -chorion is covered with numerous villi arranged in a girdle -shaped .zone ; the villi are furnished with lateral branches, like a tree. The branched villi of the chorion sink into the thickened mucous Fig. 136.— Diagrammatic representation of the finer structure of the placenta of a Cow, after TURNER. F, Foetal, M, maternal placenta ; V, villus ; e, epithelium of the chorionic villus ; e', epithelium of the maternal placenta ; d, foetal, d', maternal blood-vessels. Tig. 137.— Diagrammatic representation of the finer structure of the placenta of a Cat, after TURNER. Explanation of loiters as in fig. 136. membrane of the uterus in various directions, so that in sections there arises the appearance of an irregular interlacing (fig. 137). However, according to the concurrent accounts of TURNER and ERCOLANI, there is no penetration into the uterine glands in this case, any more than in the case of the Indeciduata. The epithelium (e') of the maternal mucous membrane (M ) persists .and forms a boundary between the villi ( V) and the maternal blood- vessels (dr), which latter have enlarged to cavities from three to four mites as wide as the foetal capillaries (d). This enlargement of the THE FCETAL MEMBRANES OF MAMMALS. 237 maternal blood- passages is full of significance for the formation of the placenta in the Deciduata as opposed to that of the Indeciduata. The second form, the discoid placenta, is characteristic of the- Rodentia, the Insectivora, the Chiroptera and Prosimiae, the Apes and Man. Here the portion of the chorion devoted to the formation, of the placenta is small ; but in compensation for this the tufts of villi (fig. 138 V) are very highly developed; the union between placenta, uterina (M) and placenta foetalis (f) is most in- timate ; the maternal blood-spaces (d1), in the case of the Apes and Man at least, are, as no- where else, enormously distended, so that the villi of the chorion (V) appear to sink directly into them and to be bathed immediately by the maternal blood. Since we shall occupy ourselves more at length in the next chapter with the human pla- centa, which belongs to this type, these few remarks may suffice for the time being. I close this section with a reference to the high systematic signifi- eance of the embryonic accessory organs of Ver- tebrates. They present, as we have seen, such great and striking dif- ferences in the separate classes, that the utilisa- tion of them for systematic purposes which has been made by MILNE-EDWARDS, OWEN, and HUXLEY was natural. All lower Vertebrates, Amphioxus, Cyclostomes, Fishes, Dipnoi Fig. 138. — Diagrammatic representation of the finer struc- ture of the human placenta according to the hypothesis of TURNER. F, Foetal, M, maternal placenta; e', epithelium of the ma.ernal placenta; d, foetal, d', maternal blood- vessels ; V, villus ; ds, decidua serotina of the human placenta; t, t, trabeculae of the serotina running to the foetal villi ; ca, convoluted artery which sinks into the blood-space d' ; up, one of the utero-placental veins conveying blood from the latter; x, a continuation over the villus of maternal tissue — lying outside the epithelial layer e' — which represents either the endo- thelium of the maternal blood-vessels or a delicate connective tissue pertaining to the serotina, or both together. The layer e' consists, at all events, of ma- ternal cells derived from the serotina. The foetal epithelial layer is no longer to be seen on the villi of the completely formed human placenta. 238 EMBRYOLOGY. and Amphibia, either possess no accessory organs at all, or only an evagination of the intestinal tube, the yolk-sac. The embryos of Reptiles, Birds, and Mammals, on the contrary, are further enclosed in two fugitive membranes characteristic of embryonic life, the amnion and serosa. They have therefore been grouped together as amniotic animals or Amniota, and the classes first mentioned have been contrasted with them as non-amniotic animals or A namnia. Among the amniotic animals a further separation into two groups •can be made : on the one side are the egg-laying Reptiles and Birds, which HUXLEY unites into the Sauropsida ; on the other side Mammals, in which (with the exception of the Monotremes) the eggs develop in the uterus, and the young are further nourished after birth by the secretions of milk-glands. In the Mammalia the foetal membranes, inasmuch as they unite with the mucous membrane of the uterus to form an organ of nutrition, take on a still more complicated character, and present modifications which in turn can readily be utilised for systematic purposes. In Monotremes and Marsupials the outer embryonic membrane retains an almost smooth surface, as in Reptiles and Birds ; in all other Mammals there arise on the surface of the chorion villi, which grow into the maternal mucous membrane. OWEN has designated the one as Implacentalia, the other as Placentalia. The terms Achoria and Choriata introduced for these by KOLLIKER are better. In the Choriata the union of the villi witn the mucous membrane is either loose or firm ; corresponding to this there is either no detachable layer of the mucous membrane of the uterus formed, no decidua, or such a structure arises as the result of close inter- growth of the placenta uterina and placenta foetalis. Thus we have the Mammalia indeciduata and the Mammalia deciduata. In each division there are again two sub-types in the formation of villi. In the Indeciduata the villi are either evenly distributed over the surface, or they are united into more or less numerous groups (placentae or cotyledons), which are separated from one another by smooth tracts of the chorion. In a part of the Deciduata the placenta is girdle-shaped, in another part disc-shaped. SUMMARY. 1. In the Mammalia there is developed, in the same way as in Reptiles and Birds, a yolk-sac, an amnion, a serosa, and an allantois. 2. Excepting in the Monotremes and Marsupials, the serosa is metamorphosed into a chorion, in that it puts forth villi, and in that THE F(ETAL MEMBRANES OF MAMMALS. 239 the connective-tissue layer of the allantois, which is provided with the umbilical blood-vessels, spreads out on its inner surface and penetrates into the villi. 3. In a part of the Mammalia certain regions of the serous membrane, where the villi grow more vigorously and put forth lateral branches, and sink into corresponding depressions of the mucous membrane of the uterus, are converted into a placenta (when many of them have arisen on one chorion they are called cotyledons). 4. On the placenta one distinguishes : — (a) A placenta foetalis, i.e., that part of the chorion which has developed the tufts of villi. (b) A placenta uterina, i.e., that part of the mucous membrane of the uterus which has proliferated and is provided with depressions for the reception of the placenta fo3talis. 5. Fatal and maternal . parts of the placenta can become more firmly united with each other ; the result is that at birth a larger or smaller tract of the mucous membrane of the uterus is also cast off, and is known as the caducous membrane, or the decidua. 6. According to the character of the embryonic membranes, the following divisions of Vertebrates may be established : — I. Anamnia, animals without an amnion. (Amphioxus, Cyclostomes, Fishes, Amphibia.) II. Amniota, animals with an anmioii (with yolk-sac, amnion, serosa, and allantois). A. Sauropsida. Egg-laying, amniotic animals. (Reptiles and Birds.) B. Mammalia. In all of them, except the Monotremes, the eggs are developed in the uterus. (a) Achoria. The serosa develops no villi, or only a few. (Monotremes, Marsupials.) (b) Choriata. The serosa becomes the villous membrane (chorion). '(1) With evenly distributed villi. (Perissodactyla, Suidae, Hippopotamidse, Tylopoda, Tragulidse, Cetacea, etc.) , . , (2) Placentalia. The serosa is at intervals metamor phosed into a placenta. a. Numerous cotyledons. (Ruminantia.) ( j3. Placenta zonaria. (Carnivora.) y' Placenta <*is«>idea. ([Man,] Apes, Rodents, In- sectivores, Bats.) Mammalia I l 240 EMBRYOLOGY. LITERATURE. Beneden, van, et Charles Julin. Recherches sur la formation de* annexes foetales chez les Marnmiferes (Lapin et Cheiropteres). Archives- de Biologic. T. V. 1884. Caldwell, "W. H. Eierlegeu der Monotremen. Referat in Schwalbe's Jahresbericht., p. 507. 1886. Caldwell, "W. H. On the Arrangement of the Embryonic Membranes in- Marsupial Animals. Quart. Jour. Micr. Sci. Vol. XXIV. p. 655. 1884. Edwards, Milne. Lecons sur la physiologic et 1'anatomie comparee de 1'homme et des animaux. Paris 1870. Eschricht. De organis quae nutritioni et respiration! foetus mammalium inserviunt. Hafniae 1837. Godet. Recherches sur la structure intime du placenta du lapin. Inaugural Dissertation. Ncuvemlle 1877. Haacke, W. Meine Entdeckung des Eierlegens der Echidna hystrix. Zool. Anzeiger, p. 647. 1884. Hoffmann, C. K. Ueber das Amnion des zweiblatterigen Keiraes. Arehiv f. mikr. Anat. Bd. XXIII. p. 530. 1884. Kblliker. Entwicklungsgeschichte des Menschen und der hbheren Thiere, pp. 261-8 and 360, 361. 1879. Mauthner, Julius. Ueber den miitterlichen Kreislauf in der Kaninchen- placenta mit Riicksicht auf die in der Menschenplacenta bis jetzt vorge- fundenen anatomischen Verhaltnisse. Sitzungsb. d. k. Akad. d. Wissensch. Math.-naturw. Classe. Bd. LXVII. Abth. 3. 1873. Milne-Edwards. See. Edwards, Milne. Osborn, H. F. Observations upon the Foetal Membranes of the Opossum- and other Marsupials. Quart. Jour. Micr. Sci. Vol. XVIII. 1883. Osborn, H. P. The Foetal Membranes of the Marsupials. Jour. Morphol Vol. I. 1887. Owen, R. Description of an Impregnated Uterus and of the Uterine Ova ot Echidna hystrix. Ann. and Mag. Nat. Hist, Vol. XIV. p 373. 1884. Slavjansky. Die regressiven Veranclerungen der Epithelialzellen in dei- serosen Hiille des Kanincheneies. Berichte iiber die Verhandl. d. k. siichsischen Gesellsch. d. Wissensch. Leipzig. Math.-phys. Classe. Bd. XXIV. pp. 247-52. 1872. Strahl, H. Die Dottersackwand u. der Parablast der Eidechse. Zeitschr. f, wiss. Zoologie. Bd. XLV. p. 282. 1887. Turner. On the Placentation of the Apes with a Comparison of the Structure of their Placenta with that of the Human Female. Philos. Trans. Roy. Sci. London. Vol. CLXIX. Part I. 1878. Turner. Some General Observations on the Placenta with especial reference to the Theory of Evolution. Jour. Anat. and Physiol. 1877. Virchow, Hans. Ueber das Epithel des Dottersackes im Hiihnerei. Disser- tation. Berlin, 1875. Waldeyer, W. Die Placenta von Inuus nemestrinus. Sitzungsb. d. k. preuss. Acad. d. Wissenscb. Berlin. 1889. Numerous citations of the literature on the foetal membranes of Mammals are to be found in Hoffmann : Grondtrekken der vergelijkende ontwikkelings- geschieclenis, etc. THE FS3 In the reflexa we become acquainted with a structure which in this complete form occurs only in the case of Man and the Apes, whereas beginnings of such a structure are also found in other groups, as, e.g., in the Carnivores. Since the foetal capsule does not at first completely fill the uterus, there remains between reflexa and vera a space filled with mucus. A second and in many respects astonishing result is, that even in very young and small blastodermic vesicles^ as all discoveries agree in showing, a well-developed chorion with abundant villi is The villi are either distributed over the whole surface of the ovum, or, as in EEICHERT'S case (fig. 140 A and B), they leave two opposite poles of the blastula free. They attain a length of one millimetre, and in part have the form of simple cylindrical elevations ; in part they already possess lateral branches. At no place have they fused with the decidua. Like the chorion itself, they consist of two layers — of a superficial epithelial layer, derived from the serosa, concern- ing which AHLFELD and KOLLMANN have made very definite and reliable statements, and of a layer of embryonic gelatinous tissue, which extends into the axis of the villi and already appears to bear here and there blood-vessels. Unfortunately we have learned nothing from investigations of these youngest of all human embryos concerning the structures within the chorion, — the remaining foetal membranes and the 244 EMBRYOLOGY. fundament of the embryo itself. Either the ova were already more or less pathologically altered, or the contents were considerably damaged in consequence of the method of preservation and by the preparation. At all events with other investigators one, I think, may conclude from the condition of^ the chorion that the embryo must have been in an advanced stage, in which germ-layers, yolk- sur, and nmnion were already formed. This assumption is all the more reasonable, since well-developed embryos from blastodermic vesicles which were only a few milli- metres larger have been described by COSTE, ALLEN THOMSON, His, and others. In these cases the head-end of the embryo only is rather sharply differentiated from the yolk-sac, which is continuous with the fundament of the intestine throughout nearly its entire Fig. 140.— The human ovum at an early stage of development. A and B, Front and side views of a human ovum of 12 to 13 days, figured by REICHERT. e, The part designated by REICHERT as embryonic spot. From QUAIN'S " Anatomy." C, An ovum of 4 to 5 weeks, showing the general character of the villous membrane before the formation of the placenta. A part of the wall of the ovum is removed in order to show the embryo in situ. After ALLEN THOMSON, from KOLLIKER'S " Entwicklungsgeschichte des- Menschen, etc." length. The neural canal is not yet closed, but the amnion never- theless is completely developed, and in fact lies almost in contact with the embryonal body ; at its posterior end it is connected with the chorion by means of a short cord, which is connected with the fundament of the allantois and has been named the belly-stalk (Bauchstiel) by His. Also in the only slightly older embryo of COSTE (fig. 141) — in which the neural tube is closed, the body distinctly segmented (us), the head provided with visceral arches (vb), behind the latter the heart (h) recognisable, and the yolk-sac (ds) further constricted off— a short belly-stalk (bst) is present. It is composed of the amnion (am1) drawn out to a point and of a connective- tissue cord, which arises from the ventral surface of the embryo out of the intestinal cavity of the pelvic region, encloses at its attached end a small cavity- THE FCETAL MEMBRANES OF MAN. 245 ™ Sch - vb (the allantois), and conducts the allantoic blood-vessels from the pelvic portion of the intestine to the chorion. This cord is a characteristic structure for the human embryo, the significance of which is still in dispute. KOLLIKER and His have given somewhat different explanations of it. KOLLIKER brings the cord into relation with the development of the allantois. He makes the fundament of this important embryonic appendage arise, as in other Mammals, from the hind gut of the embryo, and approach the seroi-a as a thick vascular connective-tissue growth lined with a narrow, short epithelial tube, without previously de- veloping inside itself a large epithelial sac. He also main- tains that the connective- tissue part of the short allan- toic coi d, or bell y-s talk, grows around on .the whole inner side of the sero^a, and into the epi- thelial villi. His regards as unwar- ranted " the assumption, in opposition to the actual state of affairs, that the human embryo at first separates itself from the part of the blasto- dermic vesicle which is employed for the chorion, and subsequently unites with it again by means of the fundament of the allantois." He does not admit that the fundament of the embryo in Man is ever wholly constricted off from the chorion, as in the remaining Mammals, and he recognises in the belly-stalk " the bridge of connection between the fundament of the embryo and the which Fig. 141.— Human embryo with yolk-sac, amnion, and belly-stalk of 15 to 18 days, aftei COSTE, from His ("Meusch'iche Embryonen"). His has untwisted somewhat the posterior end of the body in com- parison with the original figure, in order to bring into view the right side of the end of the body, the left s:de being represented in COSTE'S fig. 4. The chorion is detached at am1, am, Amnion ; am1, the point of attachment of the amnkm to the chorion drawn out to a tip; bst, belly-stalk; Sch, tail-end; us, primitive seg- ment; dff, vitelline blood-vessels; as, yolk-sac; h, heart; vb, visceral arch. •chorionic part ot tne original plastoctermic vesicle, which has never been severed." According to him the allantois in the lacenttt fc tails is entirely closed. A direct mingling of the foetal and maternal blood cannot take place in any manner ; on the other hand the prerequisite for an easy exchange of fluid and gaseous components of the blood is furnished by the very superficial position of the thin-walled capillaries. PLATE II. Diagrammatic section through the human placenta at the middle of the fifth month, after LEOPOLD. The musculature of the uterus is followed by the spongy layer of the decidua serotina (sp), in which the separation of the placenta takes place at birth along the line of separation indicated by two heavy marks ; this is followed by the compact layer ( CS), which is thrown off at birth as the placenta uterinar and which consists of the (WiNKLEE's) basal plate (£P), closing plate (Schluss- platte) (SP), cavernous blood-spaces (P), the arteria advehentes («), and the marginal sinus. The placenta fcetalis has grown into the placenta uterina; it consists of the membrana chorii (m) and the villi (z) arising from it ; on the latter are to be distinguished the roots of attachment (/t1, &2) and the free processes (/). [ep, Foetal epithelium derived from the serosa.] The chorion is still covered internally by the amnion. [The fretal part of the placenta is reproduced in blue, the maternal part in black and brown ; pink indicates the blood-spaces.] THE FCETAL MEMBRANES OF MAN. 261 The connective substance of the chorionic vittiis gelatinous tissue >vith stellate and spindle-shaped cells in the fhier branches ; in the larger stems it takes on a more fibrillar condition. The views of investigators are still at variance upon the important point whether the epithelium of the membrana chorii and the vitti is of foetal or maternal origin. KOLLIKER, LANGHANS, LEOPOLD, and others derive it from the cells of the serosa, whereas ERCOLANI and TURNER, whom BALFOUR has followed in his text-book, state more or less explicitly that, although originally the cells of the serosa cover the villi as an epithelium, during the mutual intergrowth of the placenta fcetalis and the placenta uterina they perish, and are replaced by proliferating cells of the decidua serotina. The recent investigations of KASTSCHENKO and SEDGWICK MINOT, ;as well as the observations of WALDEYER, KUPFFER, GRAF SPEE, and KEIBEL, afford much enlightenment on this controversial subject. KASTSCHENKO, who has most carefully investigated the epithelium of the chorion frondosum in the different months of pregnancy, .and with whom recently S. MINOT essentially agrees, can readily distinguish two layers : (1) a cell-layer (LANGHANS), which lies immediately upon the gelatinous substance of the villi and the connective-tissue membrana chorii, and in which the limits of some •of the cell-territories may be made out, and (2) a multinuclear protoplasmic layer, in which separate cells cannot be demonstrated in any manner. These layers are rather sharply contrasted from •each other. The double-layered chorionic epithelium is already distinctly present in eggs four weeks old, as is confirmed by KUPFFER, GRAF SPEE, and KEIBEL. The deeper layer consists of a single sheet of well-marked cubical cells; the outer layer discloses at the free surface a striated border, the significance of which is obscure. In the following months the chorionic epithelium undergoes note- worthy alterations. The deeper layer becomes thickened in many places into special cell-patches, in which the elements are much super- posed. The outer, protoplasmic layer changes still more ; it is converted into a hyaline, peculiarly lustrous substance, which is traversed by numerous fissures and spaces, and has therefore received from LANGHANS the name " canalised fibrin." There is one conclusion that in my opinion results from these inves- tigations : the view of TURNER, according to which the chorionic .epithelium is replaced in the course of pregnancy by uterine 262 EMBRYOLOGY. epithelium, must be abandoned. The chorionic epithelium, which is derived from the serosa, is preserved ; it constitutes in any event the deeper layer, composed of epithelial cells, which lies immediately on the membrana chorii or the gelatinous tissue of the villi. Perhaps there belongs to it in addition the so-called protoplasmic layer and the canalised fibrin. However, the source and significance of these structures, especially the latter substance, appear to me to be less satisfactorily explained, and to be in need of still further investiga- tions, in which the question of its origin from the maternal mucosa is not to be overlooked. For even if TURNER has erred in regard to the degeneration of the chorionic epithelium, he is probably in the right in the second point, that the whole surface of the chorion frondosum is directly invested by a layer of maternal tissue. The connective-tissue framework of the chorion frondosum, thenr is provided, as I think must be assumed, with a double investment : (1) with a foetal epithelium, derived from the serosa, and (2) with. a layer, however thin it may be, of maternal tissue. I shall endeavor to establish this view in now turning to the- discussion of the placenta uterina, the structure of which likewise presents great difficulties, and is therefore interpreted in very dif- ferent ways. The placenta uterina is developed out of the part ot i,he uterine- mucosa designated as decidua serotina (fig. 148 Dse). At birth it detaches itself, like the corresponding part of the decidua vera, from the inner surface of the womb at the line of separation shown on Plate II., by the breaking down of the thin connective-tissue septa of the underlying spongy layer. It then forms a thin membrane of only 0-5 to 1 mm. thickness, the basal plate of WINKLER (Plate II. J3P), and forms a complete investment over the placenta foetalis, which it covers up at the time of the detachment of the foetal membranes. At the margin it is directly continuous with the vera and reflexa (fig. 148). The surface turned toward the wall of the uterus is divided by deep furrows into separate divisions. Larger and smaller par- titions, the septa placentce (figs. 139 and 143), corresponding ii> position to the furrows, arise from the opposite surface of the mem- brane and penetrate in between the chorionic villi (fig. 143 z) ; they always unite a small number of these into a tuft or a cotyledon. If we imagine the cotyledons wholly removed, there would be formed in the placenta uterina a corresponding number of irregular com- partments. These are in turn subdivided into smaller and inor* THE FCETAL MEMBRANES OF MAN. 263 shallow compartments by finer connective-tissue outgrowths from the membrane and the septa. The edges of the septa do not reach to the roots of the villi in the middle of the placenta, but only in a narrow peripheral region, where they come into immediate contact with the membrana chorii (Plate II. m), and are joined together underneath it into a thin, closely applied membrane, which is pierced by the roots of the villi. This has been called by WINKLEB closing plate (Schlussplatte, SP), by KOLLIKER decidua placentalis subchorialis. Still more appro- priate is the term employed by WALDEYER, subchorial terminal ring (Schlussring), because it is thereby stated that the membrane in question is present only at the margin of the placenta, leaving the middle area of the chorion free. The connective-tissue framework of the placenta uterina possesses in general the properties of the compact, abundantly cellular layer of the decidua vera and reflexa, Tput exhibits one peculiarity in the presence of a very special form of cells, the so-called giant cells. These are large masses of protoplasm appearing yellowish grey, and with from ten to forty nuclei ; they begin to develop in the fifth month, and are found in the after-birth in great numbers ; they lie partly in the basal plate, partly in the septa, ordinarily in the immediate vicinity of large blood-vessels ; but they are also found isolated in the spongy layer of the decidua serotina and even between the adjacent muscle-bundles of the uterus. The greatest difficulties in the investigation of the placenta uterina are caused by its blood-courses. Numerous spirally twisted arterial stems (Plate II. a) penetrate through the muscular layer of the womb, and, passing through the spongy layer, reach the basal plate of the placenta uterina, where their structure undergoes important changes. For they here lose their muscular layer, and now appear as large tubes, lined with endothelium only. From the basal plate they penetrate in part into the septa placentae. From here they are not to be followed further as closed vessels ; a transition to capillaries does not take place anywhere. On the contrary, it can be proved that through openings in the basal plate and the septa they pour their blood into a system of cavities between the chorionic villi, i.e., into the intervillous or intraplacental spaces (c). The latter are bounded on the one side by the membrana chorii (m) with its villi (z), on the the other side by the basal plate (SP) with its septa. The blood is collected from this system of cavernous spaces into Jarge veins, which are likewise simply tubes lined with endothelium. 264 EMBRYOLOGY. These are distributed as a network in the septa, as well as in the basal and closing plates of WINKLER, and they begin with narrow openings, which connect with the intervillous spaces. At the margin of the placenta they are joined together, and thereby produce the marginal simis (Plato TT.), or the riini-like sinus of the placenta. This, however, is not to be regarded as a vessel of uniform calibre, but as a system of irregular spaces joined together. In virtue of the conditions described, the chorionic villi are directly bathed by the maternal blood. At the same time, from what has already been said, it is to be seen that the motion of the blood is retarded, owing to the great enlargement of the blood-courses, and that it is irregular, corresponding to the form of the intervillous spaces. In general the motion of the blood is from the middle and from the convex side of the placenta, where the arteries chiefly enter, toward its concave surface and its margin. The question as to the significance and the origin of the intervillous blood-spaces constitutes the key to the comprehension of the structure of the placenta. According to one view, which for a long time was the dominant one in Germany, and is defended by KOLLIKER, LANGHANS, and others, the intervillous spaces originally have no connection with the maternal blood-system. Developmentally they are nothing but spaces between chorion and uterine mucosa, and owe their existence to the fact that the two structures have not everywhere come in contact, but have acquired firm connection only by means of the tips of the villi. The spaces in the earliest stage would be bounded by the epithelium of the villi and the maternal mucosa. LANGHANS therefore designates them as placental spaces. According to this view they would acquire their blood-contents later only, and in this way, as KOLLIKER ex- presses it : " The proliferating chorionic villi everywhere corrode, and in part destroy the maternal placental tissue, and thus produce an opening of their vessels, which must naturally lead to a gradual penetration of the maternal blood into the intervillous spaces." This view has been modified by other observers (BRAXTON HICKS, AitLFELp, HUGE, and others) to this extent, that the intervillous spaces, even in the mature placenta, do not normally contain blood nor have connection with the maternal blood-vessels. The almost universally received views concerning placental nutrition are thus called in question. The denial of a regulated blood-circulation has induced the further hypothesis, that a uterine milk, ns in the Ruminants, is secreted by the cells of the decidua serotina into Jaa intervillous spaces, and is taken up by the foetal villi. THE FCETAL MEMBRANES OF MAN. 265 According to the second diametrically opposite view, which finds its •defenders in VIRCHOW, TURNER, ERCOLANI, LEOPOLD, WALDEYER, and others, the intervilkw&~ spaces are nothing else than the enormously enlarged capillary blood-vessels of the maternal mucosa. Chorion and decidua serotina early unite very intimately by means of their sur- faces, so that no fissures are left between them. The villi grow into the mucous tissue, the superficial capillaries of which enlarge to capa- cious spaces. If this view is cor- rect, the chorionic villi will necessarily be sur- rounded on all sides by coverings of ma- ternal tissue, or, since a partial degeneration of the covering would certainly be possible, there will of necessity be at least a stage in the development in which such a covering will be demonstrable. ERCOLANI, ROMITI, and TURNER have in fact, as has been pre- viously stated, expressed themselves to the effect that probably the epi- thelial layer resting upon the connective- tissue axis of the villi is not the original chori- I The intestinal loop with its mesentery passes through a no less fundamental twist- ing around its place of at- tachment in the lumbar region than the stomach does. The descending and the ascending arms at first lie side by side. Then the latter, which becomes the colon (fig. 165), lays itself obliquely over [ventral to] the former, and crosses the beginning of the small intestine (k) transversely. Both parts, but especially the small in- testine, continue from the end of the second month to increase rapidly in length and to take on a folded condition. Meanwhile the initial part of the colon, or the coecum (fig. 165 A bid), which exhibits even in the third month a curved, sickle-shaped, vermiform appendage, •comes to lie wholly on the right side of the body up under the liver; from here it runs in a transverse direction across [ventral to] the duodenum under [caudad of] the stomach to the region of the spleen, then bends sharply about (flexura coli lienalis) and THE ORGANS OF THE INNER GERM-LAYER. 301 descends to the left pelvic region, where it is continued into the- sigmoid flexure and rectum. Therefore there are distinguishable in the colon, even in the third month, the coecum, the transverse and the descending colon. An ascending colon is still wanting. It is formed in the succeeding months (fig. 165 B) by the gradual sinking down of the coecum, which was at first under the liver, until in the seventh month it is below the right kidney, and from the eighth month onward descends past the crest of the ilium. Meanwhile the coecum has increased in length and toward the end of pregnancy is a rather large appendage at the place of tran- sition from the small to the large intestine. It early exhibits a want of uniformity in development (fig. 165 B bid). The terminal part, which often embraces more than half its length, does not keep pace in its growth with the more rapidly enlarging proximal portion ; the former is designated as the appendix vermiformis, the latter as the coecum. At the time of birth the vermiform appendage is still not so sharply differentiated from the ccecum as it is a few years later, when it has been converted into an appendage of the size of a goose- quill and 6 to 8 cm. long. Within the region embraced by the bends of the large intestine, the small intestine, which is derived from the descending arm of the loop, is disposed in more and more numerous folds owing to its extensive growth in length (fig. 165 B}. At first all regions of the intestine from the stomach onward are so united to the lumbar region of the vertebral column by means of a common mesentery (masenterium commune) that they can move freely (fig. 165 A and B). The mesentery is naturally influenced by the increase in the length of the intestine, inasmuch as its line of insertion on the intestine exceeds in length many times the line of origin at the vertebral column (radix mesenterii), and is thereby laid into folds like a frill. Such an arrangement of the mesentery is found to be the permanent condition in many Mammals, as in the Dog, the Cat, etc. But in the case of Man, from the fourth month onward, the arrangement of the mesentery is much more complicated. There occur changes which may be briefly characterised as processes of fusion and concrescence of certain portions of the mesenterial lamella with contiguous parts of the peritoneum, either of the posterior wall of the body-cavity, or of neighboring organs. They __ mesentery of the duodenum and colon, which is always present in. the first half of embryonic development. 302 EMBRYOLOGY. The duodenum, describing the well-known horseshoe-shaped curve, applies its mesentery, in which the beginning of the pancreas is en- closed, broadly to the posterior wall of the body, and fuses throughout its whole extent with the peritoneum of the latter; from being a movable it has become an immovable portion of the intestine (fig. 167 du). The large intestine (figs. 165 and 167 A and B ct) still possesses in the third month a very broad suspensorium arising from the vertebral column, which is nothing else than a part of the common mesentery Fig. 167 A B.— Two c'i? grams to illustrate the development of the bursa omentalis. A, earlier, B, later stage. zf, Diaphragm ; I, liver ; p, pancreas ; mg, stomach ; gc, its great** curvature ; du, duodenum ; dd, small intestine ; ct, colon transversum ; *, bursa omentalis ; kn, lesser omentum ; gnl, posterior [dorsal] liimella of the greater omentum, arising from the vertebral column ; gn", anterior [ventral] lamella of the same, attached to the greater curvature of the stomach (ffc) > Qn3i the part of the omentum which has grown over the small intestine ; ffn*, the part of the omentum which encloses the pancreas ; rn.es, mesentery of the small intestine ; msc, mesocolon of the transverse colon. of the intestine, but which has received the special designation of mesocolon (msc). In consequence of the previously described twisting of the primitive loop of the intestine, not only the colon trans- versum, but also the considerable mesocolon belonging to it, has been drawn transversely across the end of the duodenum ; for a certain distance it fuses with the latter and with the posterior wall of the body, thereby acquires anew secondary line of attachment (fig. 167 msc) running from right to left, and thus appears as a part that has become detached from the common mesentery. The colon transversum {ct) with its mesocolon (msc) now divides the body-cavity into an THE ORGANS OF THE INNER GERM-LAYER. 303 upper [anterior] part, which contains the stomach, liver, duodenum, .and pancreas, and a lower part, holding the small intestine. Thus embryology explains the striking condition of the duodenum, which, in order to pass from the upper to the lower space and to liceome continuous with the small intestine, passes underneath [dorsal to] the transversely outstretched mesocolon (figs. 165 and 167 du). Also in the case of the suspensorium of the co3cum, and of the ascending and descending arms of the colon, there occurs a more or less extensive concrescence with the peritoneum of the wall of the trunk. Therefore in the adult the parts of the intestine named sometimes lie with their posterior wall broadly in contact with the body-wall ; sometimes they are supported by a broader or narrower mesentery. There still remain to be described the important changes of the bursa omentalis, the development of which during the first months of embryonic life we have already (p. 299) become acquainted with. The bursa is distinguished, first, by a very considerable growth, and, secondly, by the fact that it fuses with neighboring organs at various places. In the beginning it reaches only to the greater curvature of the stomach (figs. 165, 166), to which it is attached; but even from the third month onward it enlarges and lays itself over [ventral to] the viscera which lie below the stomach, at first over the transverse colon (fig. 167-4 gn1, gri2), then over the whole of the small intestine (fig. 167 A gnz). The bursa consists, as far as it has extended downwards, of two lamellae, which lie close to each other, separated by only a very narrow space, and are continuous at their lower margin. Of these the more superficial, the one which is nearer to the ventral wall of the belly ,Js_attachedjto the greater curvature of the stomach (gc) ; the posterior [dorsal] lamella, which lies upon the intestines, is originally attached to the vertebral column and here encloses the main part of the pancreas (figs. 167 A p and 166 p). In the case of many Mammals (Dog) the bursa omentalis remains in this condition. In Man it begins as early as the fourth month to undergo fusions (fig. 167 B ). On the left side of the body the posterior lamella reposes on the posterior wall of the body over a large extent of surface, and fuses with it (gn*), so that its line of attachment to the vertebral column moves laterad up to the origin of the diaphragm (lig. phrenico-lienale). Farther down it glides over the upper [anterior] surface of the mesocolon (rase) and over the transverse colon (ct) ; it becomes fused with both of them, with the former as early as the fourth embryonic month. At the time of 304 EMBRYOLOGY. birth the two lamellae of the portion of the bursa which has grown, over the intestines are, as in many Mammals, separated by a narrow fissure (fig. 167 B gnz) ; during the first and second years after birth they ordinarily fuse into a single lamella in which fat is deposited. HI. Development of the Separate Organs of the Alimentary Tube. The simple growth in length, to which is to be referred the for- mation of the convolutions just described, is only one and certainly not the chief means by which the inner surface of the intestine is- increased. The latter acquires a much greater addition from the fact that the inner, originally smooth epithelial layer, which is derived from the entoblast of the germ, forms evaginations and invaginations. By imaginations toward the cavity of the intestine there arise numerous folds, small papillae and villi, which give to the mucous membrane at most places a velvety structure ; by evagina- tions toward the outer surface of the tube there are developed various kinds of larger and smaller glands. By this simple device, the formation of folds, — the great importance of which in the determination of form in animals was particularly set forth in Chapter IV. of Part I., — the mucous membrane acquirer to a much greater extent the ability : (1) to secrete digestive fluids, and (2)_tp_absorb the nutritive .substances that are mechanically and chemically prepared in the intestine, and to transfer them into the- body-fluids. I discuss the numerous organs which are produced by the process, of folding according to the regions into which the intestinal tube is divided, beginning with the organs of the oral cavity. A. The Organs of the Oral Cavity : Tongue, /Salivary Glands, and Teeth~ (1) The Tongne arises, according to the investigations of His upon human embryos, out of an anterior and a posterior fundament (tig. 168). The anterior fundament appears very early as an unpaired eleva- tion (tuberculum impar, His)_pn the floor of the oral cavity in the- »pace surrounded by the mandibular ridges. It grows a good deal in width, and its anterior margin projects free over the mandible, thus forming the body and tip of the tongue. Even as early as the beginning of the third month some papillae make their appearance on it (His, KOLLIKER). The posterior fundament produces the root of the tongue, which, THE ORGANS OF THE INNER GERM-LAYER. 305 although free from papillae, is richly provided with follicular glands. It is developed out of two ridges in the region where the second and third visceral arches come together in the median plane. The anterior and posterior fundaments unite in a V-shaped furrow, the arms of which diverge in front. The cii cumvallate papillae are formed on the body of the tongue along this furrow, which persists for a long time. Where the two arms of the V meet there is a deep pit, the foramen ccecum, which His has brought into connection with the origin of the thyroid glands, which will soon be discussed. (2) The Salivary Glands are demonstrable even in the second month. The fundament of the submaxillary appears first in human embryos at the sixth week (CHIEVITZ), afterwards the parotid in the eighth week, and finally the sublingual. (3) From a morphological point of view, the Teeth can well be designated as the most interesting structures of the oral cavity. Their develop- ment in Man and Mammals is accomplished in a manner which is neither simple nor easily intelligible ; in the lower Vertebrates, on the con- trary, it is simpler, and for that reason I shall make use of the latter as the starting-point of the description. The teeth, which in Mammals are attached to the edges of the jaws and only bound the entrance to the alimentary tube, possess in the lower Vertebrates a very wide distribution. For in many species they not only cover the roof and the floor of the oral cavity and the inner surface of the branchial arches in immense numbers, as palatal, lingual, and pharyngeal teeth, but they are also distributed in close-set rows over the whole surface of the skin, and produce, as in the Selachians, a strong and at the same time flexible coat of mail. The teeth are originally nothing else than ossified papiU of the skin and the mucous membrane, upon the contiguous surfaces of which they are formed. The development of the dermal teeth in Selachians shows this in a very convincing manner. In young Shark embryos, by a proliferation on the part of the sub- epithelial cells, there are developed on the otherwise smooth surface 20 Fig. 168. — Tongue of a human embryo about 20 mm. long, neck measurement. After His, "Menschliche Embryonen." 306 EMBRYOLOGY. of the dermis, which comes from the embryonic mesenchyme, small papillae composed of numerous cells (fig. 169 zp), and these penetrate into the thick overlying epidermis. The latter also undergoes changes on its part, which are directed toward the formation of the tooth ; for those of its cells which immediately cover the papilla grow out into very long cylindrical forms, and produce an organ the function of which is to secrete enamel, the so-called enamel-membrane (fig. 169 sm). By means of further growth the whole fundament sm tp Fig 169.- Very young fundament of a dermal tooth (a placoid scale) of a Selachian embryo. zp, Dental papilla ; sm, enamel-membrane. next assumes a form which corresponds to the future hard structure (fig. 170). Then the process of ossification begins. There is secreted by the most superficial cells of the papilla (0), the odontoUasl-layer (mem- brana eboris), a thin layer of dentine (zb), which rests upon the papilla like a cap. At the same time the enamel-membrane (sm) begins its secretive activity, and coats the outer surface of the dentinal cap (zb) with a firm, thin layer of enamel (s). The body of the tooth is developed and becomes ever firmer and larger by the subsequent continual deposition of new layers on the first-formed ones, — on the dentinal cap new dentine from within through the activity of the odontoblasts ; on the coating of enamel new layers of enamel from without, through the action of the enamel-membrane. Thus the structure projects more and- more above the level of the THE ORGANS OF THE INNER GERM -LAYER. 307 skin, and the tip of the tooth finally breaks through the epidermal •covering. The tooth then acquires a still firmer attachment in the dermis from the fact that, at the surface where the lower margin of the dentine occurs, salts of lime are deposited in the superficial layers of the connective tissue (lh?), and thus a kind of connective-tissue bone, the cementum of the tooth, is produced. The finished tooth therefore is constructed out of three calcified tissues, which arise from three separate fundaments. The dentine • • bm •zp Tiy. 170. — Longitudinal section through an older fundament of a dermal tooth of a Selachian embryo. •«, Epidermis ; e1, the deepest layer of epidermal cells, which are cubical ; sch, mucous cells ; lhl, the part of the dermis which is composed of connective-tissue lamellae ; lh", superficial layer of the dermis ; zp, dental papilla ; o, odontoblasts ; zb, dentine ; «, enamel ; am, enamel* membrane. takes its origin from the odontoblast-layer of the dental papilla (mesen- chyme), the enamel from the epithelial enamel-membrane (outer germ- layer), and the cementum from connective tissue in the vicinity by means of direct ossification. The finished tooth has, moreover, within it a cavity, which is filled with a vascular connective tissue (pulp), the remnant of the papilla. When the enamel-membrane has fulfilled its office it perishes, for in the process of secretion its cells become shorter and shorter, and are finally reduced to flat scales, which are afterwards thrown off. In Selachians the formation of the teeth which occupy the edges of the jaws and serve for the comminution ot the food differs from this simple process in one important point ; they take their origin, not on the free surface of the mucous membrane, but in its •depths (fig. 171). The epithelial tract of the oral mucous membrane 308 EMBRYOLOGY. which shares in the formation of teeth has sunk deep down in the form of a ridge (zl) on the inner surface of the jaw-arches, into the under- lying loose connective tissue, and now represents a special organr distinguishable from its surroundings. This important difference is produced by the fact that in the development of the teeth of the jaws more active processes of growth take place, first because these teeth are much larger than the dermal teeth, and, secondly, because they are more rapidly worn out and must consequently be more rapidly replaced by supplementary teeth. As we have often had the oppor- tunity of observing in the study of the production of morphological conditions in animals generally, portions of epithelial membranes that Fig. 171.— Cross section through the lower jaw of a Selachian embryo with fundaments of teeth. k, Mandibular cartilage ; zl, dental ridge ; zp, dental papilla ; z'j, dentine; s, enamel ; sm, enamel* membrane ; b, connective-tissue part of the mucous membiane. grow more rapidly than their surroundings emerge from the latter and become folded either outward or inward. The process of the formation of teeth is the same on the dental ridge itself as upon the free surface of the skin. There are developed on its outer side, which is turned toward the cartilage of the jaw (k),. numerous papillae (zp), lying alongside of and behind one another, which grow into the invaginated epithelium just as the dermal papillae grow into the epidermis. Thus there arise in the depths of the mucous membrane several rows of teeth, of which the most superficial anticipate in development those which lie deeper ; the former are the first to break through the mucous membrane, to become functional, and, after having been worn out, to be cast off; they are also the first to be supplanted by reserve teeth, which lie behind them, and, developing somewhat later, are consequently younger. THE ORGANS OF THE INNER GERM-LAYEE. 309 Whereas in the Selachians, as well as in the lower Vertebrates generally, the replacement of teeth by new ones is throughout life an unlimited process, since new papillae are continually being formed in the depths of the dental ridge (polyphyodont), it is in the higher Vertebrates more limited, and in most Mammals occurs only once. There are formed on the ridge two fundaments (diphyodont), one behind the other, one for the milk-teeth and a second for the permanent teeth. In the case of Man the development of the teeth begins as early as the second month of embryonic life. A ridge (zl] (the enamel-germ of older authois) grows from the epithelium of the oral cavity both :on the maxillary and mandibular arches — as it also does in other mammalian embryos (fig. 290)— into the richly cellular embryonic connective tissue. The region from which this growth into the -depths takes place (fig. 172 A and B) is marked exteriorly by a groove, which runs parallel to the arch of the jaw, the so-called dental groove (zf). The head of the human embryo represented in figure 289 shows this groove at a little distance behind the fundament •of the upper lip. At first the dental ridge is uniformly thin and separated from its surroundings by a smooth surface. There is nothing to be seen as yet of the separate fundaments of the teeth. Then the epithelial <;ells on the side of the ridge which is directed outwards begin at certain places to grow and to produce at regular intervals from one another as many thickenings as there are to be teeth (fig. 172 A). In Man, who has twenty milk-teeth, the number of these is ten in each jaw. The thickenings now assume a flask-shaped form (fig. 172 B), and gradually detach themselves from the outer surface of the epithelial ridge (zl), except at the neck of the flask, which (remains in connection with it at a little distance from its deep edge. Because these epithelial growths have relation to the secretion of enamel, they have received the name of enamel-organs. In the meantime the connective tissue has taken its first steps toward the formation of the tooth (fig. 172 A and.Z?). At the bottom of each flask the connective-tissue cells exhibit active growth, and give rise to a papilla (zp) corresponding in form to the future tooth. _A_s_the papillae of the dermal teeth grow into the epidermis, so this papilla grows into the enamel-organ, which is thereby made to take the form of a cap. Then the special layers from which the formation of dentine and -enamel proceed are differentiated in both fundaments so far as these Are in mutual contact. At the sin-face of the papilla (fig. 172 B zp) 310 EMBRYOLOGY. the cells assume spindle-shaped forms and group themselves into a kind of epithelial layer, the layer of the dentine-forming cells (mem- brana eboris). On the part of the cap-like enamel-organ the cells of the deepest layer, which is in immediate contact with the papilla, are converted into very long cylinders and constitute the enamel-mem- brane (sm, membrana adamantime). The latter becomes gradually thinner toward the base of the papilla, where it is continued as a layer of more cubical elements (se), which forms the boundary at the surface of the cap separating it from the surrounding connective tissue. Between these two cell-layers (the inner and the outer epithelium of KOLLIKER) the remaining epithelial cells of the enamel- organ undergo a peculiar metamorphosis, and produce a kind of gelatinous tissue, the enamel-pulp (sp) ; they secrete between them a Fig. 172 A B.— Two stages in the development of the teeth of Mammals. Diagrammatic sections. zf, Dental groove ; zl, dental ridge ; zl1, deepest part of the deutal ridge, on which are formed the fundaments of the supplementary teeth ; zp, dental papilla ; sm, enamel-membrane : sp, enamel-pulp ; se, outer epithelium of the enamel-organ ; zs, dental sac ; k, bony alveolus. fluid rich in mucus and albumen, and become themselves converted into stellate cells, which are united to one another by their processes, arid thus form a fine network. The enamel-pulp is most highly developed in the fifth or sixth month, and then diminishes up to the time of birth in the same ratio as the teeth increase in size. The connective tissue immediately enveloping the whole fundament acquires numerous blood-vessels, from which branches also make their way into the papilla ; it becomes somewhat differentiated from the surrounding tissue, and is distinguished as dental sac (fig. 172 B zs).. The soft fundaments of the teeth enlarge up to the fifth month of embryonic life, and at the same time acquire the particular forms of the teeth which are to arise from them — those of the incisors, the canines, and molars. Then the process of ossification begins (fig. 173} in the same manner as in the dermal teeth. A cap of dentine (zb) is- THE ORGANS OF THE INNER GERM-LAYER. 31] formed by the odontoblasts (o), or dentinal cells ; this cap at the same time acquires a coating of enamel (s) from the enamel-membrano (sm) ; then there are continually deposited on the first layers new ones, until the crown of the tooth is completed. Under pressure of the latter the enamel-pulp (sp) atrophies, and forms only a thin covering to the tooth at birth. The papilla (zp) is converted into a mass of connective tissue containing blood-vessels (g) and nerves, and fills the cavity of the tooth as the so- called pulp. The larger the whole structure becomes, the more it raises up the tissue of the gum, which covers the edge of the jaw, and causes it to be- come gradually thinner. Finally, it breaks through the gum soon after birth, and at the same time casts MiMM^M off from its sur- -- face the atrophied remnant of the enamel-organ. The time has now come in which the third hard sub- stance of the tooth is formed, the cementum that envelops the root. So far as the dentine has received no coating of enamel, the bounding con- nective tissue of the dental sac (zs) begins, after the eruption of the teeth, to ossify and to produce a genuine bone-tissue with numerous SHARPEY'S fibres ; this bony tissue contributes to the firmer union of the root of the tooth with its connective-tissue surroundings. The eruption of tJie teeth ordinarily takes place with a certain degree of uniformity in the second half of the first year after birth. First the inner incisors of the lower jaw break through in the sixth to the Fig. 173.— Section through the fundament of the tooth of a young Dog. k, Bony alveolus of the tooth ; zp, dental papilla ; g, blood-vessel ; o, odontoblast-layer(membrana eboris) ; zb, deutiue ; *, enamel ; sm, enamel-membrane ; zs, dental sac ; sp, enamel-pujp. 312 EMBRYOLOGY. eighth months ; then in the course of a few weeks those of the upper jaw follow. The outer [lateral] incisors appear during the period between the seventh and ninth months, those of the lower jaw, again, somewhat earlier than those of the upper jaw. The front molars usually appear at the beginning of the second year, those of the lower jaw first ; then the gap thus left in the two rows of teeth is filled by the eruption of the canine or eye-teeth in the middle of the second year. Finally, the eruption of the back molars, which may be delayed into the third year, takes place. The fundaments of the reserve teeth make their appearance at the side of those of the milk-teeth at an extra- ordinarily early period. They also take their origin from the epithelial ridge. As was previously (fig. 172 A and B) stated, the ridge extends still deeper (zl1} into the underlying tissue from the place where the enamel-organs of the milk-teeth have been differentiated from it and where they remain united to it by means of an epithelial cord, the neck. Here in a short time there again appear near the edge of the ridge (fig. 174 sm2, zp2) flask- shaped epithelial growths and dental papillae, which lie on the inner [median] side of the dental sacs of the milk-teeth. In addition there are developed at the ends of the epithelial ridges, in both the right and left halves of the jaw, the enamel-organs of the posterior grinders (the molar teeth of the permanent set), which are not subject to replacement, but are formed once for all. The ossification of the second generation of teeth begins a little time before birth with the first large molars, and is followed in the first and second years after birth by that of the incisors, canines, etc. As a result in the sixth year there are in both jaws forty-eight ossified teeth, — twenty milk-teeth and twenty- eight permanent crowns,- — as well as four fundaments of wisdom teeth, which are still cellular. fig. 174.— Diagrammatic section to show the development of the milk-teeth and permanent teeth in Mammals. Third stage in the series of which figs. 172 A and B are the first and second. zf, Dental furrow ; zl, dental ridge ; k, bony alveolus of the tooth ; h, neck, by means of which the enamel-organ of the milk-tooth is connected with the dental ridge, zl ; zp, dental papilla ; zp', dental papilla of the permanent tooth ; zb, dentine ; s, enamel ; sm, enamel-membrane; Sni2, enamel-mem- brane of the permanent tooth ; sp, enamel-pulp; ge, outer epithelium of the enamel-organ ; zs, dental sac. THE ORGANS OF THE INNER GERM-LAYER. The shedding of the teeth ordinarily begins in the seventh year. It is initiated by the disorganisation and absorption of the roots of the milk-teeth, under the pressure of the growing new generation. One finds here exactly the same appearances as in the atrophy of osseous tissue, concerning which we have the thorough investigations of KOLLIKER. There arise on the roots of the teeth the well-known pits of HOWSHIP, in which large, multinuclear cells, the osteoclasts or bone-destroyers, are imbedded. The crowns are loosened by surren- dering their union with the deeper connective -tissue layers. Finally, when the permanent teeth, owing to the growth of their roots, push .forth out of the alveoli, the crowns of the milk-teeth are thereby raised up and fall off. The permanent teeth generally appear in the following order : at first, in the seventh year, the first [front] molars ; a year later the middle incisors of the lower jaw, which are followed a little later by those of the upper jaw ; in the ninth year the lateral incisors are •cut, in the tenth year the first premolars, in the eleventh year the second premolars. Then in the twelfth and thirteenth years the canines and the second molars come through. The eruption of the third molars, or wisdom teeth, is subject to great variation : it may take place in the seventeenth year, but it may be delayed till the thirtieth. Occasionally the wisdom teeth never attain a complete •development, so that they are never cut. B. The Organs arising from the Pharynx : Thymus, Thyroid Gland, Larynx, and Lung. Whereas in the water-breathing Vertebrates the visceral clefts Temain throughout life and subserve respiration, they are completely •closed in all Amniota as well as in a part of the Amphibia. The only exception is in the case of the first cleft, lying between the man- dibular and the hyoid arches, which is converted into the drum of the ear (tympanum) and the EUSTACHIAN tube, and thus enters into the service of the organ of hearing, in connection with which it will subsequently engage our attention. However, the remaining visceral clefts do not disappear without leaving any trace. From certain epithelial tracts of these there arises an organ of the neck-region which functionally is still proble- matic, the thymus, the morphology of which has been very essentially .advanced during the last few years. 314 EMBRYOLOGY. (1) The Thymua has been for several years a favorite object of embryological investiga- tion, since the time when KOLLIKER made the interesting discovery that in mammalian embryos it takes its origin from the epithelium of a visceral cleft. This discovery has since then been corroborated, and at the same time extended ; for aha in such animals as persistently breathe by means of gills the thymus is developed out of epi- thelial tracts of the open and func- tionally active gill-clefts. Let us first examine the original condition as exhibited by Fishes. As stated by DOHRN, MAURER, and DE MEURON, the thymus (th) of the Selachians (fig. 175) and the Bony Fishes has a multiple origin and is derived from separate solid epithelial growths, which take place at the dorsal ends of all the gill-clefts, and, indeed, to a greater extent on the anterior than on the posterior ones. Fig. 175.— Diagram to show the develop- ment of the thymus, the thyroid gland, and the accessory thyroid glands, and their relations to the visceral pockets in a Shark embryo, after DE MEURON. tch1, sch9, First and sixth visceral pockets ; th, fundaments of the thymus; sd, hyroid gland ; nsd, accessory thyroid gland. th nsd fig. 176, — Two diagrams [ventral aspect] of the development of the thymus, the thyroid gland and the accessory thyroid glands, and their relations to the visceral pockets in a Lizard embryo (A) and a Chick embryo (B), after DE MEURON. »ch\ ach", First and second visceral pockets ; sd, thyroid gland ; nsd, accessory thyroid gland ; th, fundament of thymus. In the Bony Fishes the separate fundaments at an early period, even before they have detached themselves from their matrix, fuse together THE ORGANS OF THE INNER GERM-LAYER. into a spindle-shaped organ lying above the insertion of the gill-arches, which subsequently becomes inde- pendent, just as it does in Selachians. The originally epithelial product ac- quires a peculiar histological char- acter from being penetrated by ingrowths of connective-tissue ele- ments. In the first place lymph - cells in great quantities migrate in between the epithelial cells, in a manner similar to that described by STOHR as of frequent occurrence in the territory of mucous membranes. Secondly, the epithelial growth is traversed in all directions and cut up into small portions by connective tissue, in which lymph-follicles are formed. The thymus thereby ac- quires the appearance of a lymphoid organ, in which the epithelial rem- nants are still in part preserved, but only in the form of very small spherical portions, as the corpuscles of HASSALL. At a still later stage of development there arise in the organ irregular cavities filled with molecular granules. These are caused by the disintegration of lymph-cells and the melting down of the reticular connective tissue, which takes place here and there. In the higher, air-breathing Ver- tebrates the thymus is derived either from the epithelium of two or three clefts or only from the epithelium of the third visceral cleft, which becomes closed. The former is the case with Reptiles (fig. 176 A th) and Birds (fig. 176 B th), the latter with Mammals. In Reptiles and Big. 177.— Semidiagrammatic illustra- tions to show the ultimate position of thymus, thyroid gland, and accessory thyroid gland on the neck of the Lizard (A), the Chick (B), and the Calf (C), after DE MEURON. sd, Thyroid gland ; nsd, accessory thyroid gland; th, thymus; tli1, accessory thymus ; Lr, trachea ; h, heart ; vj vena jugularis ; ca, carotid vein. 316 EMBRYOLOGY. Birds the two fundaments fuse early upon either side of the trachea into a longish tract of tissue, which in the former is shorter (fig. 177 A), but in the latter very much elongated (fig. 177 B). In Mammals it is principally the third visceral cleft which con- tributes to the formation of the thymus. According to KOLLIKER, BOBN, and RABL this is the only one which comes into considera- tion, whereas DE MEURON, KASTSCHENKO, and His give an account which differs from this, but only in minor details. The further changes of the fundament of the thymus in Mammals and in Man may be briefly summarised as follows. The thymus-sac, which probably takes its origin from the third visceral pocket, encloses only a very narrow cavity, but possesses a thick wall composed of many elon- gated epithelial cells (fig. 178). It then grows downward toward the pericardium, and at the posterior end begins to form, like a botryoidal gland, numerous rounded lateral branches (c). (KOLLIKER.) These are from the beginning of their formation solid, whereas the sac-like part (a), which occupies the neck-region, always continues to exhibit a narrow cavity. The budding continues for a long time, and meanwhile extends to the opposite end of the originally simple glandular sac, until the whole organ has assumed the lobed structure peculiar to it. At the same time an histological meta- morphosis is also taking place. Lymphoid connective tissue and blood-vessels grow into the thick epithelial walls and gradually destroy the appearance which so resembles a botryoidal gland. With the increase in the size of the organ the lymphoid elements coming from the surrounding tissue predominate more and more ; the epithelial rem- nants are finally to be found only in the concentric bodies of HASSALL, as MAURER has shown for Bony Fishes and as His has undoubtedly rightly inferred for Man and Mammals. The cavity originally present and resulting from the in vagina tion disappears, and instead of it there arise new irregular cavities, probably the result of a breaking down of the tissue. -Fig. 178.— Thymus of an embryo Rabbit of 16 days, after KULLIKEB. Magnified. a, Canal of the thymus ; b, upper, c, lower end of the organ. THE ORGANS OF THE INNER GERM-LAYER. 317 The further history of the thymus in Man permits the recognition of two periods, one of progressive and one of regressive development. The first period extends into the second year after birth. The- thymus of the right side and that of the left move in their growth close together into the median plane and here fuse into an unpaired, lobed organ, whose double origin is to be recognised only by the fact that the organ is ordinarily composed of lateral halves separated by connective tissue. It lies in front of [ventral to] the pericardium and the large blood-vessels beneath the breastbone, and is often elongated into two horns which extend upwards to the thyroid gland. The second period exhibits the organ undergoing regressive meta- morphosis, which usually leads to its total disappearance, the par- ticulars of which can be learned from the text -books of Histology. (2) The Thyroid Gland is found on the anterior surface of the neck, and appears to be- developed in almost all classes of Vertebrates in a tolerably uniform, typical manner from an unpaired and a paired evagination of the pharyngeal epithelium. We must therefore distinguish unpaired and paired fundaments of the thyroid gland. The unpaired fundament has been longest known. There is not a single class of Vertebrates in which it is wanting, as has been established especially by the investigations of W. MULLER. It appears to be an organ of very ancient origin, which shows relation - ship to the hypobranchial furrow of Amphioxus and the Tunicates. DOHRN has opposed this hypothesis and has expressed the view, which is also shared by others, but which lacks proof, that the thyroid gland is the remnant of a lost gill-cleft of the Vertebrates. The unpaired thyroid gland arises as a small evagination of the epithelium of the front wall of the throat in the median plane and in the vicinity of the second visceral arch. Then it detaches itself completely from its place of origin, and is converted either into a solid spheroidal body (Selachians, Teleosts, Amphibia, etc.) or into an* epithelial vesicle having a small cavity (Birds, Mammals, Man, etc.). The vesicle subsequently loses its cavity. In Man the development of the unpaired part of the thyroid gland is related to the formation of the root of the tongue, as His states in his investigations of human embryos. The previously described ridges lying on the floor of the throat-cavity in the vicinity of the second and third visceral arches, which unite in the median plane to form the root of the tongue, surround a deep depression^ 318 EMBRYOLOGY. •which is tbe equivalent of the evagination of the pharyngeal epithelium In the remaining Vertebrates. By the further approximation of the ridges the depres- sion becomes an epithelial sac, which remains for a long time in communication with the surface of the tongue by means of a narrow passage, the ductus thyreoglossus. The paired fundaments of the thyroid gland were discovered a few years ago by STIEDA in mammalian embryos, but they have been more fully investigated by BORN, His, KASTSCHENKO, DE MEURON, and others in Mammals and other Vertebrates (excepting Cyclo- stomes). In the Amphibia, as well as in Birds and Mammals (fig. 176 .5), there are formed, a little while after the appearance of the unpaired fundament, two hollow evaginations of the ventral epithelium of the throat behind the last visceral arch and in con- nection with the last visceral cleft. They come to lie immediately on either side of the entrance to the larynx. In many Reptiles (fig. 176 A nsd) there is an interesting deviation due to the fact that an evagination is developed only on the left side of the body, while on the right it has become rudimentary. Even in the Selachians (fig. 175), as DE MEURON appears rightly to maintain, paired fundaments of thyroid glands are present. They are the previously mentioned supra-pericardial bodies discovered by v. BEMMELEN. These arise as evaginations of the epithelium of the throat behind the last pair of gill-clefts near the anterior end of the heart. In all cases the evaginated portions of the epithelium become detached froui their parent tissue and enclosed on all sides by connective tissue ; they then undergo a metamorphosis similar to that of the impaired fundament of the thyroid gland. In regard to their ultimate position there exist considerable differences between the separate classes of Vertebrates. In the Selachians the supra-pericardial bodies remain far away from the unpaired thyroid gland, being located in the vicinity of the heart ; but in the other Vertebrates they move more or less close to the gland, and have here acquired the name of accessory thyroid glands (fig. 177 A and B nsd). Finally, in Mammals and Man the approxi- mation has led to a complete fusion of the unpaired and the lateral, paired fundaments (fig. 177 C). Together they constitute a horse- shoe-shaped body that embraces the larynx. It is, however, to be observed, that at the time of their fusion the lateral fundaments, in comparison with the median one, are only very small nodules. Consequently KASTSCHENKO, who is probably in the right, ascribes to the former an inconsiderable importance for the development of the THE ORGANS OF THE INNER GERM-LAYER. 319 Avhole mass of the thyroid gland, whereas His maintains that they become in Man the voluminous lateral lobes, and that the unpaired fundament becomes the small middle part of the organ. The further development of the thyroid gland is accomplished in a very similar manner in all Vertebrates. Two stages tire distinguishable. During the first stage the whole fundament grows out into numerous cylindrical cords, which in turn push out lateral buds (fig. 179). By the union of these with one another there is formed a network, into the interstices of which are distributed branches of the blood-ve s s e 1 s together with embryonic con- nective tissue. In the case of the Chick it is found that the thyroid gland has reached this stage of de- velopment on the ninth day of incubation, in the Rabbit embryo when it is about six- teen days old, in Man in the second month. During the second stage the network of epithelial cords is resolved into the characteristic follicles of the thyroid gland. The cords acquire a narrow lumen, around which the cylindrical cells are regularly arranged. Then there are formed on the cords at short intervals enlargements, which are separated by slight constric- tions (fig. 180). By the deepening of the constrictions the whole network is finally subdivided into numerous, small, hollow epithelial vesicles or follicles, which are separated from one another * [The elevation caused by the mid-brain may be called the apex or crown (Scheitel). In later stages the distance between crown and rump is greater than that between neck and rump, hence the measurement is made from the crown. Compare foot-note, p. 283.] Fig. 179.— Right half of the thyroid gland of an embryo Pig 21 5 mm. long, crown-rump measurement,* after BORN. Magnified 80 diameters. The lateral (LS) and median (MS) thyroid glands are in process of fusion, g, Blood-vessels ; tr, trachea. 320 EMBRYOLOGY. by highly vascular embryonic tissue. Subsequently the follicle* increase in size, especially in the case of Man ; this results from th& epithelial cells secreting a considerable quantity of colloid substance into the cavity. A few further details concerning the thyroid gland of Man, for which we are indebted to His, may be of interest. First, it is to be noted that the lateral fundaments are considerably more voluminous than the middle part, and that the future fundamental form of the organ is thus from the beginning pre- determined. Secondly, some rare anatomical conditions (His) are explained by the development, such as the ductus lingualis, the ductus thyroideus, and the glandula suprahyoidea and praehyoidea. As was previously stated, the unpaired fundament of the thyroid gland is connected with the root of the tongue by means of the ductus tbyreoglossus. When the thyroid gland moves- from its place of origin farther down, this duct becomes elon- gated into a narrow epithelial passage, whose external orifice remains permanently visible as the foramen coecum at the base of the tongue. The remaining part usually undergoes degene- ration, but occasionally some parts of it also persist. Thus- the foramen ccecum is some- times elongated into a canal (ductus lingualis) 2£ cm. long,, that leads to the body of the Fig. 180. -Section through the thyroid gland of an embryo Sheep 6 cm. long, after W. MULLER. sch, Sac-like fundaments of the gland ; /, glandular follicles in process of formation ; b, interstitial connective tissue with blood-vessels (g). hyoid bone. In other instances the middle part of the thyroid gland is prolonged upward in the form of a horn, which is continued as a tube (ductus- thyroideus) to the hyoid bone. Finally, according to His, the glandular vesicles now and then to be observed in the vicinity of the hyoid bone — the accessory thyroid glands, as well as the glandula supra- and prae-hyoidea — are to be- interpreted as remnants of the ductus thyreoglossus. (3) Lung and Larynx. The lung with its outlet (larynx and trachea) is developed, like a lobed gland, out of the 03sophagus in a tolerably uniform manner, as it appears, for all amniotic Vertebrates. Immediately behind the- unpaired fundament of the thyroid gland (fig. 181 Sd) there arises on the ventral side of the oesophagus a groove (Kk), which is slightly enlarged at its proximal end. It is to be seen in the Chick at the beginning of the third day, in the Rabbit on the tenth day after fertilisation, and in the human embryo when it is 3'2 mm. long THE ORGANS OF THE INNER GERM-LAYER. 321 Soon the groove-like evagination becomes separated from the over- lying portion of the alimentary tube by two lateral ridges ; this furnishes the first indication of a differentiation into oesophagus and trachea (fig. 181). Then there grow out from the enlarged posterior ends of the groove (figs. 181, 163) two small sacs (Lj) toward the two sides of the body (in the Chick in the middle of the third day), the fundaments of the right and left lung. Enveloped in a thick layer of em- bryonic connective tissue, they are in im- mediate contact behind with the fundament of the heart; laterally they project into the anterior fissure-like prolongation of the body - cavity. With this the essential parts of the respiratory apparatus are estab- lished; at this stage in amniotic Vertebrates they resemble the simple sac-like structures which the lungs of Amphibia present permanently. In the further course of development the fun- daments of trachea and o?sophagus, which com- municate by means of a fissure, become separated by a constriction which begins behind, where the pulmonary sacs have budded out, and gradually moves forward. The constricting off is here interrupted at the place which becomes the entrance to the larynx. The latter is distinguishable in the case of Man at the end of the fifth week as an enlargement at the beginning of the fundament of the trachea. It acquires its cartilages in the eighth or ninth week. Of these the thyroid cartilage arises, according to the comparative-anatomical investigations of DUBOIS, from a fusion 21 Fig, 181. — Alimentary tube of a human embryo (R of His) 5 mm. long, neck measurement. From His, " Meusch- liche Embryonen." Magnified 20 diameters. RT, EATHKE'S pouch ; Uk, lower jaw ; Sd, thyroid gland ; Ch, chorda dorsalis ; Kk, entrance to the larynx ; Lg, lung ; Mg, stomach ; P, pancreas ; Lbg, primitive hepatic duct ; Ds, vitelline duct i stalk of the intestine); All, allantoic duct ; W, Wolffian duct, with kidney- duct (ureter) budding out of it ; B, bursa pelvis. 322 EMBRYOLOGY. of tine fourth and fifth visceral arches, whereas the cricoid /and ary tenoid cartilages, as well as the half -rings of the trachea, are independent chondrifications in the mucous membrane. Two stages are recognisable in the metamorphosis of the primitive lung-sacs of Man and Mammals. The first stage begins with the elongation of the sac, which is attenuated^ at its origin from the trachea, but is enlarged at its opposite- or fo-ee end. At the same time — in Man from the end of the first month (His) — it pushes out, in the manner of an alveolar gland r hollow evaginations, which grow out into the thick connective- tissue envelope and enlarge at their ends into little sacs. The first bud-like- outgrowths on the two sides of the body are not symmetrical (fig. 182-)-, because the left lung-sac produces two, the right three bud-like enlargements. An im- lr portant feature of the architecture of the lungs is thus established from the beginning, namely, the differentiation of the right lung into three chief lobes, and of the left into two. The further budding is distinctly dichotonious (fig. 183). It takes place in the following way : each terminal vesicle (primitive lung- vesicle), which is at first spheroidal, becomes flattened and indented on the wall (Ib) which lies opposite its attachment. Thus it becomes divided, as it were, into two new pulmonary vesicles, each of which is then differentiated into a long stalk (lateral bronchus) and a spherical enlargement. Inasmuch as such a process of budding is kept up for a long time, — in Man until the sixth month, — there arises a complicated system of canals, the bronchial tree, which opens into the trachea by means of a single main bronchial tube from either side1 of the body, and the ultimate branches of which, becoming finer and finer, terminate in flask-shaped enlargements, the primitive lung-vesicles. The latter are at first confined to the surface of the lung, while the system of canals occupies its interior. During this budding the lungs as they increase in volume continue to grow downwards into the thoracic cavities, and thereby Fig. 1S2. — View of a reconstruction of the fundament of the lungs of a human embryo (Pr of His) 10 mm. long, neck measurement, after H s. Ir, Trachea ; br, right bronchus ; sp, oesophagus ; bf, con- nective-tissue envelope and serous* membrane (pleura) into which the epithelial fundament of the lur.g grows ; 0, M, U, fundameiits of the upper, middle, and lower lobes- of the right lung; O1, Ul, fundaments of the upper and lower lobes of the left lung. THE ORGANS OF THE INNER GERM-LAYER. 323 come to lie more and more at the right and left of the heart. With their ingrowth into the cavities of the chest (fig. 314 brh), they push before them the serous lining of the latter, and thus acquire their pleural covering (the pleura pulmonalis, or the visceral layer of the pleura). During the second stage the organ, which up to this time has the typical structure of a botryoidal gland, assumes the characteristic pulmonary structure. The metamorphosis begins in Man, as KOLLIKER states, in the sixth month, and comes to a close in the last month of pregnancy. There now arise close together on the fine terminal tu- bules of the bron- chial tree, on the alveolar passages, and on their ter- minal vesicular enlarge in ents, very numerous small e v a g i n a- tions. But in dis- tinction from the earlier ones, these are not constricted Fig. 183. — View of a reconstruction of the fundament of the lungs of a human embryo (N of H:s) older than that of fig. 182. AftirH:s. Magnified 50 diameters. Ap, Aiteria pulmonalis ; Lr, trachea ; sp, oesophagus ; Z6, 'pulmonary vesicle in process of division ; 0, upper lobe of the right lung with an eparterial bronchus leading to it ; ]if, V, middle and lower lobes of the right lung; 0', upper lobe of the left lung with hyparterial bronchus leading to it ; Ul, lower lobe of the left lung. off from their source of origin, but communicate with the latter by means of wide orifices, and thus constitute the air-cells or pulmonary alveoli. Their size is only a third or fourth as great in the embryo as in the adult ; from this KOLLIKER concludes that the increase in the volume of the lung from birth up to complete development of the body is to be attributed exclusively to the enlargement of the vesicular elements which exist in the embryo. The epithelial lining of the lung is variously modified in different regions during development. In the whole bronchial tree the epithelial cells increase in height, acquire in part a cylindrical, in part a cubical form, and from the fourth month onward (KOLLIKER) have their free surfaces covered with cilia. In the air-sacs, on the contrary, the cells, which are arranged in a single layer, become 324 EMBRYOLOGY. more and more flattened, and in the adult become so thin that formerly the presence of an epithelial covering was wholly denied. Then they assume a condition similar to that of endothelial cells ; as in the case of the latter, their boundaries are demonstrable only after treatment with a weak solution of silver nitrate. C. The Glands of the Small Intestine : Liver and Pancreas. (1) The Liver. In the section which treats of the liver we must enter upon a dis- cussion not only of the development of the parenchyma of the gland, but also of the various hepatic ligaments — the lesser omentum, the ligamentum suspensorium, etc. ; in fact, we must begin with the latter because they/ are developed out of a structure — a ventral mesentery — which is ontogenetically older than the liver itself. In view of the manner in which the body-cavity arises, as a pair of cavities, such a structure ought to be found along the whole length of the ventral side of the alimentary canal in the same manner as on its dorsal side. Instead of that, it is found only at the anterior region of the alimentary canal, along a tract which extends from the throat to the end of the duodenum. This ventral mesentery acquires a special significance, because several important organs take their origin in it ; in front, the heart, together with the vessels that bring the blood back to it — the terminal parts of the venae omphalomesentericae and of the vena umbili- calis; immediately behind the latter, the liver with its outlet and its blood-vessels. The part which, during an early stage of development, encloses the heart is called mesocardium anterius and posterius ; we shall return to it later in considering the development of that organ. The portion (fig. 184) which joins this behind [caudad] has been hitherto less regarded by embryologists. Since it stretches from the lesser curvature of the stomach and the duodenum (du) to the anterior [ventral] wall of the trunk, it may be especially designated as the ventral gastric and duodenal mesentery, or, under a more compre- Pig. 184. — Diagram (view of a cross section) to show the original re- lations of duodenum, pancreas, and liver, and of the lig-amentous structures belonging to them. HR, Posterior wall of the trunk ; du, duodenum ; p, pancreas ; I, liver ; dms, dorsal mesentery ; Ihd, ligamentum hepa- to du denale ; Is, liga- mentnm suspensorium hepatis. THE ORGANS OF THE INNER GERM LAYER. 325 -mp Tig. 185.— Cross section through the anterior part of the trunk of an embryo of Scyllium, after BALFOUR. Between the dorsal and ventral walls of the body, where the attachment of the stalk of the yolk- sac is cut, there is stretched a broad mesentery which contains numerous cells and completely divides the body-cavity into a right and a left half. The duodenum (du), lying iu the mesentery, is twice cut through ; dorsally it gives rise to the fundament of the pancreas (pan), ventrally to that of the liver (hp.d). Further, the place where the vitelline duct (unic) emerges from the duodenum is to be seen, sp.c, Neural tube (spinal cord) ; sp.g, ganglion of posterior root ; ar, anterior root ; dn, dorsally directed nerve springing from the posterior root ; mp, muscle-plate ; rap1, part of muscle-plate already converted into muscles ; mp.l, part of muscie-plate which gives rise to the muscles of the limbs ; nl, nervus lateralis ; ao, aorta ; c/t, chorda ; sy.y, sympathetic ganglion ; ca.v, cardinal vein ; sp.n, spinal nerve ; sd. segmeutal duct (duct of primitive kidney) ; st, segmental tube (pronephric tubule). 326 EMBRYOLOGY. hensive title, as ventral alimentary mesentery (Ihd + Is). It has been described by KOLLIKER on sections of Rabbit embryos as liver- ridge (Leberwulst), and by His in his " Anatomie menschlicher Embryonen " as prehepaticus (Vorleber) ; it has the form of a mas» of tissue rich in cells, which inserts itself between the wall of the belly and the regions of the intestine previously mentioned. In cross sections through human and mammalian embryos there are encountered in it the capacious venae omphalomesenterica3. As far as a mesocardium and a mesogastrium anterius are developed in Vertebrates, the body-cavity appears even subsequently as a paired structure. The cross section through a Selachian embryo (fig. 185) shows this distinctly. The duodenum (du) is enclosed in the connective -tissue mesentery, which reaches from the aorta (ao) to the front [ventral] wall of the trunk ; dorsally the pancreas (pan) is budded forth from its wall, ventrally the liver (hp.d). The liver begins to be developed very early in the ventral me- sentery (liver-ridge or prehepaticus), and in this exhibits, as will appc ar later, two modifications, which are, however, unessential ; for sometimes it appears in the form of a single, sometimes as a paired evagination of the epithelial lining of the ventral wall of the duo- denum. The first is the case, for example, in the Amphibia and SelachiL In Bombinator (fig. 159), as GOETTE has shown, the liver arises as a broad ventrally directed evagination of the intestine, which lies im- mediately in front of the accumulation of yolk-material. The liver remains permanently in this simplest form in the case of Amphioxu& lanceolatus, in which it is located immediately behind the gill-region as an appendage of the intestinal canal. In the case of Birds and Mammals, on the contrary, the funda- ment of the liver is from the beginning double. As has been known since the investigations of REMAK, in the case of the Chick (fig. 186} on the third day of incubation, two sacs (/) grow out of the ventral wall of the duodenum immediately behind the spindle-shaped stomach (St). They grow into the broad cell-mass of the ventral mesogastrium (the Leberwulst), one passing forward to the left, the other backward to the right, and thereby embrace from above the vena omphalomesenterica on its way to the heart. The process in Mammals is somewhat different. According to the observations of KOLLIKER in the case of the Rabbit, the primitive hepatic tube of the left side is forme:! in the embryo of ten days, to which a right THE ORGANS OF THE INNER GERM-LAYER. 327 duct is added in the course of another day. Also in th« case of human embryos 4 mm. long His demonstrated that at first there is only a single hepatic duct, and that some time afterwards a second appears (fig. 163 Lbg\ In the further course of development both the unpaired and the paired hepatic fundaments are metamorphosed quite rapidly into a tubular gland with numerous branches; this acquires a special character, differing from that of simple tubular glands, owing to the fact that the tubes early become joined together to form a fine network, since the primitive hepatic ifcubes send out numerous lateral buds, which in some Vertebrates (Amphibia, Selachii) are from the be- ginning hollow, in others (Birds, Mam- mals, Man) solid. Imbedded in the embryonic connective substance of the ventral mesogastrium, they grow out in the former case into hollow tubes, in the latter into solid cylinders. These in turn are soon covered with corre- sponding lateral processes, and so on. Inasmuch as these grow toward one another, and where they meet (fig. 1 87 Ic) fuse, there arises a close network of hollow glandular canals or solid hepatic cylinders in the common connective- tissue matrix. Simultaneously with the epithelial network there is formed in its meshes a network of blood-vessels (g). From the vena omphalomesenterica, which, as previously stated, is embraced by the two hepatic tubes, there grow out numerous shoots, and these by forming lateral .branches unite with one another in a manner corresponding to that of the hepatic cylinders. The liver of the Chick is found to be in this condition on the sixth day. It has become even now a rather voluminous organ, and is composed, as in the case of Mammals and Man, of two equally large lobes, each of which has arisen from one of the two primitive hepatic ducts by budding. The two lobes produce on the ventral mesentery two ridges, one of which projects into the left body-cavity and one into the right (fig. 184). Fig. 186.— Diagrammatic view of the alimentary canal of a Chick on the fourth day, after GOETTE. The heavy line indicates the inner germ-layer, the shaded portion surrounding it the splanchnic portion of the mesoblast. lg, Lung ; St, stomach ; pt pancreas ; I, liver. 328 EMBRYOLOGY. A further increase in the size of the liver is due to the fact that from the hepatic cylinders united into a network new lateral branches grow forth and undergo anastomosis, whereby new meshes are being continually formed. Herewith the essential parts of the liver are present in the fun- dament : (1) the secretory liver-calls and the bile-ducts, (2) the peritoneal covering and the suspensory apparatus, both of which are Fig. 187.— Section through the fundament of the liver of a Chick on ttie sixth day of incubation, Slightly en'arged. Ic, Network of hepatic cylinders ; lcl, hepatic cylinder cut crosswise ; g, blood-vessels ; gw, wall of the blood-vessel (endothelium) ; bl, blood-corpuscles ; bf, peritoneal covering of the liver derived from the ventral mesentery. The changes in these parts which lead to the permanent condition are now to be considered. The epithelium of the ducts and the secretory liver-parenchyma are derived from the two hepatic tubes and from the network of hepatic cylinders, — products of the entoblast. The parts of the two primitive liver-tubes first formed become the right and left ductus hepatici. In Birds and Mammals these open at first, as we have seen, into the duodenum close together ; then at their place of entrance there is formed a small evagination of the THE ORGANS OF THE INNER GERM-LAYER. 329 duodenum, which receives the two ductus hepatici. The evagination gradually increases to a long single canal, the bile-duct or ductus choledochus, the result of which process is that the whole liver is farther removed from its source of origin. By an evagination either of the ductus choledochus or of one of the two ductus hepatici, the gall-bladder with its ductus cysticus is established. In Man it arises from the ductus choledochus, and is present as early as the second month. The network of hepatic cylinders, which are sometimes hollow, sometimes solid, is metamorphosed in two ways. One part becomes the excretory ducts (the ductus biliferi). In the cases in which the hepatic cylinders are at first solid, they begin to become hollow and to arrange their cells into a cubical or cylin- drical epithelium around the lumen. In this process some of the branches of the network must degenerate. For, whereas all hepatic cylinders at first communicate with one another by means of anas- tomoses, this is, as KOLLIKER remarks, no longer the case in the adult, except at the outlet of the liver (Leberpforte), where the well-known network of bile-ducts exists. The remaining part of the network furnishes the secretory paren- chyma of liver-cells. The character of a netlike tubular gland, which becomes so evident during development, is to be recognised even in the fully developed organ in the case of the lower Verte- brates, the Amphibia and Reptiles. The tubules of the gland, which were from the beginning hollow, subsequently exhibit an exceedingly narrow lumen, which is demonstrable only by means of artificial injection, and which in cross section is surrounded by three to five liver-cells. Through their manifold anastomoses they produce an extraordinarily fine network, the small meshes of which are filled up by a network of capillary blood-vessels, together with a very small amount of connective substance. In the higher Vertebrates (Birds, Mammals, Man) the tubular structure of the gland subsequently becomes very inconspicuous and the liver acquires a complicated structure, information concerning the details of which is given in the text-books of histology. There are three things which, from a developmental point of view, are not to be lost sight of : first, the capillaries of the bile-duct have arisen by canalisa- tion of the primitive hepatic cylinders ; secondly, they are bounded by only cwo liver-cells, which are very large and flake-like ; thirdly, they send out evaginations between and even into the liver-cells themselves. In this way » greater complication is brought about in the arrangement of the fine biliary 330 EMBRYOLOGY. capillaries and the hepatic cells, to which there also corresponds a greater complication in the distribution of the capillaries of the blood-vessels. By means of all this the original tubular structure of the gland becomes almost entirely obliterated in the fully developed organ. In the adult, as is well known, the parenchyma of the liver is divided by means of connective-tissue partitions into small lobes (acini or lobuli). At the beginning of development nothing is seen of the lobulated structure, because all the hepatic cylinders are united into a network. Detailed in- formation concerning the development of the lobules is wanting. ten Now a few words concerning the ligaments and the conditions of form and size which the liver presents up to the time of birth. The ligamentous apparatus, as was remarked in the beginning, is preformed in a ventral mesentery (the Vorleber). Owing to the fact that the two hepatic sacs grow out from the duodenum into this ventral mesentery, and by continual branching produce the right and the left lobes of the liver (figs. 184, 185, and 188), the ventral mesentery becomes divided into three portions : first, a middle part, which furnishes the peritoneal covering for both lobes of the liver; secondly, a ligament which proceeds from the front convex surface of the liver in a sagittal direction to the- ventral wall of the body, extending as far as the navel and embracing in its free margin the subsequently disappearing umbilical vein (ligamentum suspensorium and teres hepatis, figs. 184, 188 Is); and thirdly, a liga- ment which proceeds from the opposite, concave or portal surface of the liver to the duodenum and the lesser curvature of the stomach,, and which contains the ductus choledochus and the afferent hepatic blood-vessels (omentum minus, which is divided into the ligamentum- he pato-gastricum and hepato-duodenale). (Figs. 184 Ihd and 188 kn.)> The lesser omentum or omentum minus soon loses its original sagittal position and is stretched out into a thin membrane running from right to left (fig. 166 kn) ; this is due to the fact that the stomach undergoes the previously described displacement, and moves Pig. 188. — Diagram to show the original positions of the liver, stomach, duodenum, pancreas, and spleen, and the ligamentous apparatus pertaining to them. The organs are seen in longi- tudinal section. i. Liver ; m, spleen ; p, pancreas ; dd, small intestine ; dg, vitelJine duct ; bid, ccecum ; md, rectum ; kc, lesser curvature, gc, greater curvature of the stomach ; mes, mesentery ; kn, lesser omentum (lig. hepato-gastricum and hepato- duodenale) ; Is, ligamentum SUB- pensorium hepatis. THE ORGANS OP THE INNER GERM-LAYER 331 into the left half of the peritoneal cavity, whereas the liver grows out into the right half more than into the left. In consequence of the formation of the liver and the lesser omentum, the greater omentum, produced by the torsion of the stomach, receives an addition, which is designated as its antechamber (atrium bursse omentalis). For there comes to be associated with the greater omentum that part of the body-cavity which lies behind the liver and lesser omentum, and which in the adult possesses, as is well known, only a narrow entrance (the foramen of WINSLOW) lying below the ligamentum hepato-duodenale. Concerning the development of the coronary ligament, see a subsequent part which treats of the diaphragm. As far as regards the conditions of form and size which the liver- presents up to the time of birth, there are two points which are worthy of attention : first, the liver early acquires a very extra- ordinary size ; secondly, its two lobes are developed at first quite symmetrically. In the third month it nearly fills the whole body- cavity ; its free sharp margin — on which a deep incision between the two lobes is observable — reaches down almost to the inguinal region r leaving here only a small space free, in which, upon opening the body- cavity, loops of the small intestine are to be seen. It is a very vas- cular organ, for a great part of the blood returning from the placenta to the heart passes through it. At this time the secretion of bile begins, although only to a slight extent. This increases in the second half of pregnancy. In consequence of this the intestine gradually becomes filled with a brownish-black mass, the meconium. This is a mixture of bile with mucus and detached epithelial cells of the intestine, to which is added amniotic water with flakes of epidermis and hairs that have been swallowed. After birth the meconium is accumulated in the large intestine, from which it is soon afterwards eliminated. In the second half of pregnancy the growth of the two lobes of the liver becomes unequal, and the left is surpassed more and more in size by the right. Before birth the lower margin of the liver projects downward for some distance beyond the costal cartilages, almost to the umbilicus. After birth it diminishes rapidly in size and weight, in consequence of the change in the circulation produced by the pro- cess of respiration. For the stream of blood which during embryonic life has branched off from the umbilical vein into the liver now ceases. During the growth of the body the liver also increases in size still further, but less than the body taken as a whole, so that its relative weight is coiistai tly undergoing reduction. 332 EMBRYOLOGY. (2) The Panweas. The pancreas is developed in all Vertebrates — with the exception of a few in which it is wanting (Bony Fishes) — as an evagination on the dorsal side of the duodenum, usually opposite to the origin of the liver (figs. 162, 163, 186 p). In the Chick (fig. 186) the first funda- ment is distinguishable as early as the fourth day ; in Man it appears somewhat later than the primitive hepatic tube, and has been de- monstrated by His in embryos 8 mm. long as a small evagination (figs. 162 and 163). The sac, usually hollow, grows into the dorsal mesentery (figs. 184, 188 p) by giving off hollow, branching, lateral outgrowths. In the case of Man the pancreas is present as early as the sixth week in the form of an elongated gland (fig. 164 JP), the free end of which has penetrated upward [cephalad] into the mesogastrium, and thus, midway between the greater curvature of the stomach and the vertebral column, it can move freely. It is therefore com- pelled to share in the alteration of position which the stomach to- gether with its mesentery undergoes. In embryos of the sixth week its long axis still corresponds approximately with the longitudinal axis of the body. The free end then moves into, the left half of the body-cavity, the whole organ being turned (fig. 166) until finally its long axis comes to lie in the transverse axis of the body, as in the adult. In this position its head is imbedded in the horseshoe-shaped curvature of the duodenum, whereas its tail reaches to the spleen and left kidney. Inasmuch as the pancreas in its development has grown into the mesogastrium (figs. 164, 166, 188), it possesses in the first half of embryonic life, as TOLDT has shown, a mesentery, on which it accomplishes the turning previously described. But at the fifth month this disappears. (Compare the diagrams fig. 167 A and B p.] For as soon as the gland has taken its transverse position, it at- taches itself firmly to the posterior wall of the trunk and soon loses its freedom of motion, because its peritoneal covering and its mesentery become fused with the adjacent parts of the peritoneum (fig. 167 B gn4). In this manner the pancreas of Man, which was developed, like the liver, as an intraperitoneal organ, has become a so-called extraperitoneal organ, owing to a process of fusion between the serous surfaces that come in contact with each other. By means of this also the attachment of the mesogastrium is displaced from the vertebral column farther to the left. THE ORGANS OF THE INNER GERM-LAYER. 333 It still remains to be mentioned, in regard to the outlet of the pancreas, that during development it is continually moving nearer to the ductus choledochus, and that finally it opens in common with the latter into the duodenum at the diverticulum of YATER. SUMMARY A. Orifices of the Alimentary Canal. 1. The original orifice of the alimentary canal (resulting from the invagination of the inner germ-layer), the primitive mouth (blasto- pore), becomes closed later, owing to the circumcrescence of the medullary ridges, and furnishes temporarily an open communica- tion with the neural tube, the canalis neurentericus. 2. The neurenteric canal likewise disappears subsequently by the fusion of its walls. 3. The alimentary tube acquires new openings to the outside (visceral clefts, mouth, anus) by the fusion of its walls with the body-wall at certain places, and by the regions of fusion then becoming thinner and rupturing. 4. The visceral clefts arise on both sides of the future neck-region of the body, usually five or six pairs in the lower Vertebrates, four pairs in Birds, Mammals, and Man. (Formation of outer and inner throat-furrows ; breaking through of the closing plate.) 5. In water-inhabiting Vertebrates the visceral clefts serve for branchial respiration (development of branchial lamsllse by the for- mation of folds of the mucous membrane) ; in Reptiles, Birds, and Mammals they be'come clostd and disappear, with the exception of the upper part of the first fissure, which is employed in the develop- ment of the organ of hearing (external ear, tympanum, Eustachian tube). 6. The mouth is developed at the head-end of the embryo by an unpaired invagination of the epidermis, which, as oral sinus, grows toward the blindly ending fore gut, and by the breaking through of the primitive pharyngeal membrane. (Primitive palatal velum.) 7. The anus arises, in a manner similar to that of the mouth, on the ventral side at some distance in front of the posterior end of the body, so that the intestinal tube is continued for a certain distance beyond the anus toward the tail. 8. The post- anal or caudal intestine, which at first stretches from the anus to the posterior end of the body (tail-part of the body), becomes rudimentary afterwards and wholly disappears, so that the 334 EMBRYOLOGY. anus then marks the termination, as the mouth does the beginning, of the alimentary canal. B. Separation of the Alimentcvry Tube and its Mesentery into Distinct Regions. 1. The alimentary canal is originally a tube running straight from mouth to anus, near the middle of which the yolk-sac (umbilical vesicle) is attached by means of the vitelline duct (stalk of the intestine). 2. The alimentary tube is attached throughout its whole length to the vertebral column by means of a narrow dorsal mesentery ; it is also connected with the anterior wall of the trunk, as far back as the umbilicus, by means of a ventral mesentery (mesocardium anterius and posterius, anterior [ventral] gastric and duodenal mesentery). (Vorleber.) 3. At some distance behind the visceral clefts, the stomach arises as a spindle-shaped enlargement of the alimentary tube ; its dorsal mesentery is designated as mesogastrium. 4. The portion which follows the stomach grows more rapidly in length than the trunk, and therefore forms in the body-cavity a loop with an upper [anterior], descending narrower arm, which be- comes the small intestine, and a lower [posterior], ascending more capacious arm, which produces the large intestine. 5. The stomach takes on the form of a sac, and becomes so turned that its long axis coincides with the transverse axis of the body, and that the line of attachment of the mesogastrium, or its greater curvature, which was at first dorsal, comes to lie below, cr caudad. 6. The intestinal loop undergoes such a twisting that its lower, ascending arm (large intestine) is laid over [ventral to] the upper, descending arm (small intestine) from right to left, and crosses it near its origin from the stomach. 7. The twisting of the intestinal loop explains why in the adult the duodenum, as it merges into the jejunum, passes under the transverse colon and through its mesocolon. (Crossing and crossed parts of the intestine.) 8. The lower arm of the loop, during and after its twisting and crossing of the upper arm, assumes the form of a horseshoe and permits one to distinguish the ccecum, the colon ascendens, c. trans- versum, and c. descenclens. 9. Within the space bounded by the horseshoe, the upper arm THE ORGANS OF THE INNER GERM-LAYER. 335 of the loop becomes folded to form the convolutions of the small intestine. 10. The mesentery, which is at first uniform and common to the whole alimentary tube, becomes differentiated into separate regions, for it adapts itself to the folds and to the elongations of the ali mentary tube. It is elongated and here and there undergoes fusion with the peritoneum of the body-cavity, by means of which it either acquires new points of attachment or in certain tracts wholly disappears ; some portions of the intestine are thus deprived of their mesentery. 11. The mesentery of the duodenum, and in part also that of the •colon ascendens and c. descendens, fuses with the wall of the body ^extraperitoneal parts of the intestine). 1 2. The mesentery of the colon transversum acquires a new line of .attachment running from right to left, and becomes differentiated from the common mesentery as mesocolon. 13. The mesogastrium of the stomach follows the torsions of the latter and is converted into the greater omentum, which grows out from the greater curvature of the stomach to cover over all the viscera lying below. 14. Fusions of the walls of the omentum with adjacent serous membranes take place : (1) on the posterior wall of the body, in consequence of which the line of origin from the vertebral column is displaced to the left side of the body ; (2) with the mesocolon and colon transversum ; (3) on the part of the sac which has overgrown the intestines, where its anterior and posterior walls come into close -contact and fuse into an omental plate. •C. Development of Special Organs out of the Walls of the Alimentary Tube. 1. The surface of the alimentary tube increases in extent inward i>y means of folds and villi, and by glandular evaginations outward. 2. There are developed, as organs of the oral cavity, the tongue, the salivary glands, and the teeth. 3. The teeth, which in the higher Vertebrates are found only at the entrance of the mouth, are distributed in the lower Vertebrates {Selachians, etc.) over the whole of the cavity of the mouth and throat, and indeed as dermal teeth over the whole surface of the body. 4. The dermal teeth are dermal papillae ossified in a peculiar 336 EMBRYOLOGY. manner, in the development of which both the superficial layer of the corium and also the deepest cell-layer of the epidermis investing the latter are concerned. (a) The corium [dermis] produces the abundantly cellular dental papilla, which secretes the dentine at its surface, where- a layer of odontoblasts is formed. (b) The epidermis furnishes a layer of tall cylindrical cells, the enamel-membrane, which covers the dentine-cap with a thin layer of enamel. (c) The base of the dentine-cap acquires a better attachment in the dermis from the fact that the latter becomes ossi- fied in its vicinity and furnishes the cementum. 5. At the margins of the jaws the tooth-forming tract of the- mucous membrane sinks down into the underlying tissue ; there is first developed by a proliferation on the part of the epithelium a dental ridge, on which the teeth of the jaws arise in the same way that the dermal teeth do on the surface of the body. 6. The development of a tooth takes place on the ridge in the following way : the epithelium grows more rapidly at one point, and a papilla of the connective-tissue part of the mucous membrane grows into this proliferated part or enamel-organ. The dental papilla forms the dentine, but the enamel-organ, developing an enamel-membrane, secretes the enamel ; finally, the connective-tissue- dental sac becomes ossified and furnishes the cementum. 7. Beneath the milk-teeth there are early formed in Mammals and Man, at the deep edge of the dental ridge, the fundaments of supplementary teeth. 8. From the throat-region of the intestine there are developed thymus, thyroid gland, accessory thyroid gland, and lungs. 9. The thymus arises by the thickening and peculiar metamorphosis of the epithelium of several pairs (Selachii, Teleostei, Amphibia, Reptilia), or of only one pair, of visceral clefts. (a) In Selachians and Teleosts there is a proliferation of epithelium at the dorsal ends of all the visceral clefts, which are penetrated by growths of connective tissue and blood-vessels. (b) In Mammals and Man there is formed from the third pair of visceral clefts a pair of epithelial thymus-sacs, which send out lateral buds and become peculiarly altered histologically. (c) In Man the two thymus-sacs are joined in the median THE ORGANS OF THE INNER GERM-LAYER. 337 plane to an unpaired body, which begins to degenerate in the first years after birth. 10. The thyroid gland is an unpaired organ, which arises in the region of the body of the hyoid bone from either a hollow or a solid outgrowth of the epithelium in the floor of the pharyrigeal cavity. (a) The epithelial rod detaches itself from its parental tissue and forms lateral rods. (b) At a later stage these epithelial cords become separated into small epithelial spheres, which secrete in their interiors colloid substance and are converted into wholly closed glandular sacs enveloped in highly vascular capsules of connective tissue. 11. The accessory thyroid glands are paired and arise from evagi- nations of the epithelium of the last pair of visceral clefts, which undergo metamorphoses similar to those of the unpaired thyroid gland. 12. The accessory thyroid glands in most Vertebrates remain separated from the unpaired thyroid gland by a greater (Reptiles)- or less (Birds) space, whereas in Mammals they appear to fuse with, it to form a -single body, 13. The lung is developed out of the floor of the alimentary canae in the throat-region, behind the fundament of the unpaired thyroid gland. (a) A groove-like — the entrance to the larynx, — becomes larynx and wind- pipe. (b) From the posterior end of the groove there grow out two sacs, which acquire at their ends vesicular enlargements and constitute the fundaments of the right and left, bronchus, together with the corresponding lung. (c) The want of symmetry between the right and left lung is early exhibited, since the right sac provides itself with three vesicular lateral buds, the fundaments of the three lobes, whereas the left sac forms only two buds. (d) The further development of the lungs allows one to dis- tinguish two stages, of which the first exhibits a great similarity to the development of an acinous gland. In the first stages the primitive pulmonary sacs increase in number by constrictions and at the same time become differentiated into a narrower conducting part the 22 338 EMBRYOLOGY. bronchial tubes, and a broader vesicular terminal part. In the second stage the air-cells or pulmonary alveoli are formed. 14. From the intestinal canal proper there are formed only two glands, which are large and developed from the duodenum — the liver and the pancreas. 15. The liver is developed as a branched tubular gland which becomes a network. (a) There grow out from the duodenum into the ventral mesentery or prehepaticus (Yorleber) two liver-tubes, the fundaments of the left and right lobes of the liver. (b) The tubes form hollow or solid lateral branches, the hepatic cylinders, which are united into a network and become in part bile-ducts, in part the secretory paren- chyma of the liver and biliary capillaries. (c) The ductus choledochus arises as an evagination of the wall of the duodenum which receives the two hepatic tubes, and it forms at one place an evagination which becomes the gall-bladder and the cystic duct. 16. From the ventral mesentery, into which the hepatic tubes grow, are derived the serous investment and a part of the ligamentous apparatus of the liver, namely, the lesser omentum (ligameiitum hepato-gastricum and hepato-duoclenale) and the ligament um sus- pensorium hepatis. 17. The pancreas grows from the duodenum into the dorsal mesentery and into the mesogastrium. 18. The mesentery which the pancreas originally possesses subse- quently disappears by becoming fused with the posterior wall of the trunk ; at the same time, in consequence of the twisting of the stomach, the long axis of the pancreatic gland comes to lie in the *tra sverse axis of the body. LITERATURE. Afanassiew. Weitere Untersuchungen liber den Bau uud die Entwickelung der Thymus und der \Vinterschlafdriise der Saugethiere. Archiv f. mikr. Anat. Bd. XIV. 1877. Bemmelen, van. Die Visceraltaschen und Aortenbogen bei Reptilien und Vogeln. Zool. Anzeiger, Nr. 231, 232, 1886, pp. 528, 543. Bemmelen, van. Ueber die Suprapericardialkorper. Anat. Anzeiger, Jahrg. TV. 1889, Xr. 13. Bemmelen, van. Die Halsgegend der Reptilien. Zool. Anzeiger, Jabrg. X. Nr. 244, 1887, p. 88. LITERATURE. 339 Bonnet. Ueber die Entwicklung der Allantois und die Bildung des Afters bei den Wiederkauern und iiber die Bedeutung der Primitivrinne und des Primitivstreifs bei den Embryonen der Saugethiere. Anat. Anzeiger. 1888. Born, G. Ueber die Derivate der embryonalen Schlundbogen und Schlund- spalten bei Saugethieren. Archiv f. mikr. Anat. Bd. XXII. 1883, p. 271. Braun. Entwicklungsvorgange am Schwanzende bei Saugethieren. Archiv f. Anat. u. Physiol. 1882. Anat. Abth. p. 207. Chievitz, J. C. Beitrage zur Entwicklungsgeschichte der Speicheldriisen. Archiv f. Anat. u. Physiol. Anat. Abth. 1885. Dohrn. Studien zur Urgeschichte des Wirbelthierkorpers. Die Thyreoidea bei Petromyzon, Amphioxus und Tunicaten. Mittheil. a. d. zool. Station Neapel. Bd. VI. 1886. Dohrn. Studien zur Urgeschichte des Wirbelthierkorpers. Nr. 12. Thyre- oidea u. Hypobranchialrinne etc. Mittheil. a. d. zool. Station Neapel. Bd. VII. 1887. Dubois. Zur Morphologic des Larynx. Anat. Anzeiger, Jahrg. I. Nr. 7 u. 9. 1886. Pischelis. Beitrage zur Kenntniss der Entwicklungsgeschichte der Gl. thyreoidea u. Gl. thymus. Archiv f. mikr. Anat. Bd. XXV. 1885, p. 405. Fol. Ueber die Schleimdriise oder den Endostyl der Tunicaten. Morphol. Jahrb. Bd. I. 1875. Oasser. Die Entstehung der Cloakenoffnung bei Hiihnerembryonen. Archiv f. Anat. u. Entwicklungsg. Jahrg. 1880. Oiacomini. Sul canale neurenterico e sul canale anale nelle vesicola blasto- dermiche di coniglio. Torino 1888. Gotte. Beitrage zur Entwicklungsgeschichte des Darmcanals im Hiihnchen. Tubingen 1867. Hannover. Ueber die Entwicklung und den Bau des Saugethierzahns. Nova Acta Acad. Caes. Leop. Natur. curiosorum. Breslau und Bonn. 1856. Bd. XXV. Abth. 2. Hertwig, Oscar. Ueber Bau und Entwicklung der Placoidschuppen und der Zahne der Selachier. Jena. Zeitschr. Bd. VIII. 1 874. Hertwig, Oscar. Ueber das Zahnsystein der Amphibien und seine Bedeu- tung fur die Genese des Skelets der Mundhohle. Archiv f. rnikr. Anat. Bd. XI. Supplement. 1874. His, Wilhelm. Mittheilungen zur Embryologie der Saugethiere u. des Menschen. Archiv f. Anat. u. Physiol. Anat. Abth. 1881. His, Wilhelm. Ueber den Sinus praecervicalis und iiber die Thymusanlage. Archiv f. Anat. u. Physiol. Anat. Abth. 1886. His, Wilhelm. Zur Bildungsgeschichte der Lungen beim menschlLhen Embryo. Archiv f. Anat, u. Physiol. Anat. Abth. 1887. His, Wilhelm. ScMundspalten u. Thymusanlagen. Archiv f. Anat. u. Physiol. Anat. Abth. 1889. Kadyi, H. Ueber accessorische Schilddriisenlappchen in der Zungenbeinge- gend. (Gland, praehyoides et suprahyoides.) Archiv f . Anat. u. Physiol. Anat. Abth. 1879. .Kastschenko. Das Schicksal der embryonalen Schlundspalten bei Sauge- thieren. Archiv f. mikr. Anat. Bd. XXX. 1887, pp. 1-26. Kastschenko.Das Schlundspaltengebiet des Hiihnchens. Archiv f . Anat. u. Physiol. Anat. Abth. 1887. 340 EMBRYOLOGY. Keibel. Die Entwicklungsvorgange am hinteren Ende des Meerschweincheru embryos. Archiv f. Anat. u. Physiol. Anat. Abth. 1888. KSlliker. Die Entwicklung des Zahnsackchens der Wiederkauer Zeitschr f. wiss. Zoologie. Bd. XII. 1863. Kollmann, J. Entwicklung der Milch- u. Ersatzzahne beim Menschen* Zeitschr. f. wiss. Zoologie. Bd. XX. 1870. Kupffer, C. Ueber den Canalis neurentericus der Wirbelthiere. Sitzungsb. d. Gesellsch. f. Morphol. u. Pbysiol. Miinchen. 1887. Liessner. Ein Beitrag zur Kenntniss der Kiemenspalten und ihrer Anlagen bei amnioten Wirbelthieren. Morphol. Jahrb. Bd. XIII. 1888, p. 402. Mall, F. The Branchial Clefts of the Dog, with Special Reference to the Origin of the Thymus Gland. Studies Biol. Lab. Johns Hopkins Uni- versity. Vol. IV. 1888, p. 185. Mall, F. Entwicklung der Branchialbogen u. Spalten des Huhnchens Archiv f. Anat. u. Physiol. Anat. Abth. 1887. Maurer. Schilddriise und Thymus der Teleostier. Morphol. Jahrb. Bd. XI, 1886, p. 129. Merten. Historisches iiber die Entdeckung der Glandula suprahyoidea. Archiv f. Anat. u. Physiol. Anat. Abth. 1879. Meuron, Pierre de. Recherches sur le developpement du Thymus et de la Glande Thyroide. Dissertation. Geneve. • 1886. Miiller, Johannes. Ueber den Ursprung der Netze und ihr Verhaltniss zum Peritonealsacke beim Menschen, aus anatomischen Untersuchungen an Embryonen. Archiv f. Anat. u. Physiol. 1830. Miiller, W. Ueber die Entwicklung der Schilddriise. Jena. Zeitschr. Bd. VI. 1871. Miiller, W. DieHypobranchialrinnederTunicaten. Jena.Zeits. Bd.VII. 1872, Ostromnoff. Ueber den Blastoporus u. den Schwanzdarm bei Eidechsen u. Selachiern. Zool. Anzeiger. 1889, p. 364. Owen, R. Odontography. London 1840-45. Perenyi. Blastoporus bei den Frb'scheu. Berichte d. Akad. d. Wissensch. zu Budapest. Bd. V. pp. 254-8. Piersol. Ueber die Entwicklung der embryonalen Schlundspalten u. ihrer Derivate. Zeitschr. f. wiss. Zoologie. Bd. XLVII. 1888. Rabl, Karl. Ueber das Gebiet des Nervus facialis. >nat. Anzeiger. Jahrg. II. Nr. 8. 1887. Rabl, Karl. Zur Bildungsgeschichte des Halses. Pr*ger medicin. Wochen- schrift. 1886, Nr. 52, and 1887, Nr. 1. Robin et Magitot. Mem. sur la genese et le developpement des follicules dentaires etc. Jour, de la Physiol. T. III., pp. 1, 300, 663; IV., pp. CO. 14;". 1860, 1861. Schanz. Das Schicksal des Blastoporus bei den Amphibien. Jena. Zeitschr. Bd. XXI. 1887, p. 411. Schwarz, D. Untersucliungen des Schwauzendes bei den Embryonen der Wirbelthiere. Zeitschr. f. wiss. Zooiogie. Bd. XLVIII. 188!), p. 191. Seessel. Zur Entwicklungsgeschichte des Vorderdarms. Arcliiv f. Anat. u. Entwicklungsg. Jabrg. 1877. Spec, Graf. Ueber die ersten Vorgange der Ablagerung des Zahnscbmelzes. Anat. Anzeiger. Jahrg. II. Nr. 4. 1887, Stieda. Einiges iiber Bau und Entwicklung der Saugethierlungen. Zcitsohr. f. wiss. Zoologie. Bd. XXX. Suppl. 1878, p. 106. THE ORGANS OF THE MIDDLE GERM-LAYER. 341 Stieda. Untersuchungen iiber die Entwicklung der Glandula thymus, Glan- dula thyreoidea und Glandula carotica. Leipzig 1881. Strahl, H. Zur Bildung der Cloake des Kaninchenembryo. Archiv f. Anat. u. Physiol. Anat. Abth. 1886. Toldt und Zuckerkandl. Ueber die Form- und Texturvertinderungen der menschlichen Leber wahrend des Wachsthums. Sitzungsb. d. k. Akad. d. Wissensch. Wien, math.-naturw. 01. Bd. LXXII. Abth. 3, Jahrg. 1875, p. 241. 1876. Toldt, C. Bau- und Wachsthumsveranderungen der Gekrose des menschl. Darmcanales. Denkschr. d. k. Akad. d. Wissensch. Wien, math.-naturw. 01. Bd. XLJ. Abth. 2, 1879, pp. 1-56. Toldt, C. Die Entwicklung und Ausbildung der Driisen des Magens. Sitzungsb. d. k. Akad. d. Wissensch. Wien, math.-naturw. 01. Bd. LXXXII. Abth. 3, Jahrg. 1880, p. 57. 1881. Toldt, C. Die Darmgekrose u. Netze. Denkschr. d. k. Akad. d. Wissensch. Wien, math, -naturw. 01. Bd. LVI. Abth. 1, pp. 1-46. 1889. Tomes, Charles. Manual of Dental Anatomy, Human and Comparative. London 1882. German translation by Hollander. Berlin 1877. TJskow, N. Bemerkungen zur Entwicklungsgeschichte der Leber u. der Lungen. Archiv f. mikr. Anat. Bd. XXII. 1883. "Waldeyer, Bau und Entwicklung der Zahne. Strieker's Handouch der Lehre von den Geweben. Leipzig 1871. English translation. New York 1872. "Waldeyer. Untersuchungen iiber die Entwicklung der Zahne. Danzig 1864. Wolfler, Anton. Ueber die Entwicklung und den Bau der Schilddruse. Berlin 1880. 'Wolff, Caspar Friedr. Ueber die Bildung des Darmcanals im bebruteten Huhncht- n. Uebersetzt von Fr. Meckel. Halle 1812. CHAPTER XV. THE ORGANS OF THE MIDDLE GERM-LATER. VOLUNTARY MUSCULATURE, URINARY AND SEXUAL ORGANS. THE organs which take their origin from the middle germ-layer stand in the closest genetic relation to the morphological products of the entoblast. For, as was stated in the first part of this work, the middle germ-layer is developed by a process of evagination from the inner germ-layer, and is therefore, like the latter, an epithelial mem- brane, which serves as the boundary of a cavity. In view of its origin, is it remarkable that the organs arising from it are of a glandular nature, and such as produce excretions by means of genuine epithelial glandular cells 1 In earlier times this phenomenon was the cause of a good deal 34'J EMBRYOLOGY. of difficulty, because since the time of REMAK there hac* been an endeavor to bring the middle germ-layer as a non-epithelial structure into contrast with the other germ-layers. Attempts were also made to explain this supposed contradiction by assuming that the glandular organs in question were derived, sometimes in one way, sometimes in another, from the outer germ-layer. With the acceptance of the coelom-theory, however, the theoretical objections to the production of glands by the middle germ-layer have ceased to have any foundation. Out of the middle germ-layer, or, otherwise expressed, out of the epithelial wall of the embryonic body-sacs, are developed — aside from the mesenchyme, concerning the source of which an extended account was given in the ninth chapter — three very different products : first the whole voluntary musculature, secondly the urinary and sexual organs, thirdly the epithelial or endothelial linings of the large serous cavities of the body. I. The Development of the Voluntary Musculature. The total, transversely striped, voluntary musculature, aside from a part of the muscles of the head, arises from those parts of the middle germ-layer which have been differentiated as primitive segments, and with their appearance have effected the first primitive and most important segmentation of the vertebrate body. As has been previously stated, the segmentation affects the head as well as the trunk, so that trunk-segments and head-segments must be dis- tinguished. Since the latter are in many points distinguished in their origin and metamorphosis from the former, a separate descrip- tion of the two is fitting. I begin with the history of the metamor- phosis of the primitive segments of the trunk, and treat of the same first in Amphioxus and the Cyclostomes, which furnish the simplest and most easily interpreted conditions, and then in the Amphibia, and finally in the higher Vertebrates. A. Primitive /Segments of the Trunk. In Amphioxus the primitive segments (fig. 103 uaJi) are sacs, which are provided with a large cavity, and the walls of which are composed of a single layer of epithelial cells. The latter are further developed in two ways, for an accurate knowledge of which we are indebted to HATSCHEK. Only the cells (fig. 189) which abut upon the chorda (ch) and the neural tube (n) are destined to form muscle-fibres; they THE ORGANS OF THE MIDDLE GERM-LAYER 343 increase considerably in size, project far into the cavity of the primitive segment, and assume the form of plates ; these lie par&lle] to one another and to the longitudinal axis of the body ; and one margin, which I shall designate as the base, is placed perpendicularly upon the surface of the chorda. Very early (in the stage with ten primitive segments) the cell-plates begin at their bases to be differ- entiated into transversely striped muscle-fibrilloe, with which the embryos are already able to execute feeble contractions. By the continual addition of new fibrillae to those which are formed at the surface of the chorda, and by an extension of the differentiation to both the surfaces of the cell-plates which are in contact with each other, there arise the transversely striped muscle-layers (Muskelbliitter) which are characteristic of the musculature of Amphioxus. These are attached to the chorda on the right and left like the leaves of a book. The more the fibrillse increase in number, the more the protoplasm of the forma- tive cells between them diminishes in amount and the more is the nucleus with a remnant of protoplasm forced toward that edge of the cell which faces the cavity of the primitive segment. The remaining cells of the primitive segment are converted into a low pavement-epithelium, which neither now nor later takes part in the formation of muscles. (Cutis-layer of HATSCHEK.) Having arisen in the vicinity of the chorda, the muscle-layer in older animals spreads out both dorsally and ventrally, and thus furnishes the total voluminous musculature of the trunk, which, like the cellular primitive segments from which it is derived, is separated into successive portions (the myomeres). In general the Cyclostomes (fig. 190) agree in the development of their muscles with Amphioxus. Here, as there, one must distinguish between an inner muscle-forming epithelial layer (mf), which bounds the chorda (Ch) and the neural tube (^V), and an outer indifferent epithelial layer (ae), which occupies the side toward the epidermis. The latter (ae) consists of low flat cells, the former of very broad and Fig. 189. — Cross section through the middle of the body of an Am- phioxus embryo with 11 primitive segments, after HATSCHEK. ak, ik, Outer, inner germ-layer ; mkl, ruk2, parietal, visceral lamella of the middle germ-layer ; us, primi- tive segment ; n, neural tube ; ch, chorda ; Ih, body-cavity ; dh, intestinal cavity. 344 EMBRYOLOGY. WZ ,-/,* elongated plates (mk), which as in Amphioxus /ire arranged perpen- dicularly to the surface of the chorda and neural tube. Since in Petromyzon the primitive segments are destitute of cavities, the two epithelial layers lie immediately in contact, and are continuous with each other, both dorsally and ventrally, by means of transitional cells (WZ), in the same way that in the fundament of the lens its epithelium is continuous with the lens-fibres. Muscle-fibrillae (mf) are now differentiated on both the broad surfaces of the cell-plates. Thus arise muscle-layers (Mus- kelblatter) which are perpen- dicular to the chorda. These layers are each composed of two sheets of the finest fibrillse, running parallel to one an- other. The two sheets are separated from each other by a delicate film of cementing substance ; one of them owes its existence to one formative cell, the other to an adjacent cell. In older larvae the primi- tive segments spread out both above and below ; accom- panying this process there is a continual formation of new muscle-layers from the pre- viously mentioned cells ( \VZ). The upper and lower margins of the primitive segments therefore constitute a zone of proliferation, by means of which the musculature of the trunk is continually growing further dorsad and ventrad. At a later stage of development, in larvae six weeks old (fig. 191), the muscle-layers are converted into Muskelkdstchen (k), as SCHNEIDER has named these peculiar definite structural elements of the Cyclo- stomes. The facing fibrillae- sheets of two adjacent layers (Blatter) unite with each other along their margins. Since these sheets have been produced on the two sides of one cell-plate, each formative cell is now surrounded on all sides, as though with a mantle, by the fibrillae which it has generated. Fig. 190. — Cross section through the trunk-muscu- lature of a larva of Petromyzon Planeri 14 days old. Magnified 500 diameters. N and Ch, the part of the cross section which is adjacent to the neural tube and the chorda ; chs, skeletogenous sheath of the chorda; ep, epidermis ; ae, outer epithelial layer of the primitive segment ; mk, nuclei of muscle-cells ; mf, muscle-nbrillfc in cross section ; WZ, zone of growth —transition from the outer cell-layer to the muscle-forming layer of the primitive segment. THE ORGANS OF THE MIDDLE GERM-LAYER. 345 Finally, three alterations of the Muskelkastchen take place. The homogeneous cementing substance, which was indicated during the first stage by only a fine line between the two fibrillse-sheets of a muscle-layer, increases and produces the partition by means of which the individual Muskelkastchen are separated from each other, and in which afterwards connective-tissue cells and blood-vessels are also to be found. Secondly, the protoplasmic matrix of the formative cells is almost completely consumed in the continued production of numerous fine fibrillae, which finally fill the whole interior of the Kast- chen. One can now distinguish two different kinds of fibrillae — those that are centrally located, and those that are firmly attached to the partitions. Thirdly, there are to be found scattered between the fibrillse numerous small nuclei, which pro- bably are descended from the original single nucleus of the formative cell by frequently repeated division. The development of the muscle-seg- ments takes place in the remaining Ver- tebrates in a somewhat different manner from that of Amphioxus and the Cyclo- stomes. For the study of this process the tailed Amphibia furnish the most instructive objects. In Triton (figs. 106, 105 ush) each of the primitive segments contains a considerable cavity, which is bounded on all sides by large cylindrical epithelial cells. In somewhat older embryos active cell-multiplication takes place in the part of the epithelium which is adjacent to the chorda and neural tube, and which, therefore, corresponds to the previously described muscle-forming layer of Amphioxus and the Oyclostomes. By this growth the cavity of a primitive segment becomes entirely filled. At the same time the cells lose their original arrangement and form ; they are converted into longitudinally ar- ranged cylinders, which correspond in length to a primitive segment and are located by the side of and above one another on both sides of, and parallel to, the spinal cord and chorda dorsalis (fig. 192). Each cylinder, which in the beginning exhibits only a single nucleus (mk), becomes surrounded with a mantle of the finest transversely striped fibrillae (mf) ; it is now comparable with a Muskelkastchen of the Cyclostomes (fig. 191). A series of further alterations also takes place in this instance as in the former. In older larvae there are mf mk k Fig. 191.— Cross section through the trunk-musculature of a larva of Petromyzon Planeri 6 weeks old. Magnified 500 diameters. k, Muskelkastchen ; mk, nuclei of muscle-cells ; mf, muscle- fibrillse cut crosswise. 346 EMBRYOLOGY. continually being formed more fibrillse (fig. 193), which gradually fill the interior portion of the cylinder. Only in the axis of the latter are there places left free, in which the small nuclei (ink) come to lie ; these, formed by division of the single mother-nucleus, increase considerably in number. Moreover, connective tissue with blood- vessels now penetrates between the muscle -fibres or the primitive bundles (pb), as the finished elements are subsequently called. If we consider from a general point of view the facts here presented^ — which have been acquired in the study of the lower Vertebrates, — dt Fig. 192. Fig. 193. Fig. 198.— Cross section through the musculature of the trunk of a larva of Triton taeniatu* 5 days old. Magnified 500 diameters. mk, Nuclei of muscle-cells ; mf, muscle-fibrillae cut crosswise ; dk, yolk-granules. Fig. 193.— Cross section through the musculature of the trunk of a larva of Triton tseniatu* 10 days old. Magnified 500 diameters. pb, Primitive bundle of muscle-fibrillae (Musktlprimitivbundel) ; mf, muscle-fibrillae cut cross- wise ; mk, nuclei of muscle-cells. we arrive at two propositions of importance concerning the origin of the musculature : — (1) In Vertebrates the elements of thv musculature of the trunk are developed out of epithelial cells which are derived from a circumscribed territory of the epithelium of the body-cavity, — a territory that is con- stricted off from the latter to form the primitive segments. (2) The epithelial products become surrounded and enveloped on all sides by connective tissue, just as do the glands and gland-ducts that bud forth from an epithelium. A comparison with the condition and development of the musculature of some classes of Invertebrates leads to a still better comprehension of the above propositions. In most of the Ccelenterates the muscular elements are components of the epithelium, not only during their development, but also in the adult animal, so that the designation epithelio-muscular cells is suitable for them. THE ORGANS OF THE MIDDLE GERM-LAYER. 347 The characteristic feature of these consists in their being simple — sometimes cubical, sometimes cylindrical, sometimes thread-like — epithelial cells, the outer ends of which ordinarily reach the surface of the epithelium and are here provided with cilia, whereas their basal ends lie upon the sustentative lamella (Stlitzlamelle) of the body and are there differentiated into one or several either smooth or transversely striped muscle-fibrillae. Inasmuch as the fibrillae of numerous cells lie parallel and close to one another, muscle-lamellce arise, by the activity of which the changes in the form of the body are ""produced. In Coslenterates both the outer and the inner germ-layers can develop muscle-cells. When one turns to the Vermes it is seen, in those groups in which a body- cavity (an enterocoel) is formed by an infolding of the inner germ-layer, that the parietal wall of the body-cavity, or the parietal lamella of the middle germ -layer, has assumed the production of the entire musculature of the trunk. Here also, for example in the Chgetognatha, etc., the epithelial cells differentiate at their basal ends, which are directed toward the surface of the body, a lamella of muscle-fibrillae, whereas their other ends bound the body-cavity. Tints from the lower to the higher animals the capability of producing muscles is, with the progressive differentiation of the body, more and more restricted to a limited special territory of the total epithelial investment of the body. This process has proceeded furthest in the Vertebrates, for in them the musculature of the trunk is no longer furnished by the whole parietal lamella of the middle germ-layer, but by only a small detached part of it, the primitive segments. Consequently in Vertebrates the musculature spreads out from a small region where it originates, distributes itself first in the trunk, and then from the latter grows out into the extremities. In the Vertebrates we recognised two different forms of voluntary musculature, the muscle-layer (and the Muskelkastchen derivable from it) and the primitive bundle (Mnskelprimitivbiindel). Parallels to this are found in the Inverte- brates, both in Coelenterates and in Worms. In Ccelenterates both forms are derived from the primitive smoothly outspread muscle-lamella by the forma- tion of folds, and are to be explained in the same way as the formation of those folds which in epithelial lamellae play such an important part in the origin of the most various organs. When certain tracts of a muscle-lamella are called upon to execute additional labor, this can be effected only by an increase in the number of the fibrillae lying parallel to one another. But a greater number of fibrillae can be brought into a circumscribed territory only in one or the other of two ways : either by their coming to lie in several layers one above another, or — if the more simple arrangement of lying side by side is to be retained— by the folding of the muscle-lamella. The folding exhibits two modifications. Sometimes there are produced parallel daughter-lamellae placed side by side and perpendicular to the mother-lamellae ; sometimes the folded lamellae become wholly detached from the parent-layer and converted into muscle -cylinders, which imbed themselves in the underlying sustentative lamella. With the conception here presented of the origin of the transversely striped muscle-fibres of Vertebrates, it must be assumed as very probable that subsequently an increase in their number will take place as a result of constriction and detachment into two parts, as was first maintained by WEI SM ANN. 348 EMBRYOLOGY. In Amphioxus, the Cyclostomes, and the Amphibia the most important function of the primitive segments is the production of the fundament of the transversely striped and voluntary musculature. On the other hand it is not very evident that the primitive segments also share, in the manner previously (p. 172) described, in the deve- lopment of the mesenchyme; this is correlated with the fact that in general the connective and sustentative substances play a slight role in the con- struction of the bodies of the lower Vertebrates, and es- pecially during larval life are developed to only a very insig- nificant amount. This is altered in the Sela- chians and the three higher classes of Vertebrates. Not only does the mesenchyme in the adult bodies of these attain a more voluminous development and a degree of differentiation that is in all directions more advanced, but it is also established earlier and likewise in greater abundance. Therefore the primitive segments here ex- hibit in their metamorphosis somewhat modified pheno- mena. At the same time with the differentiation of the muscular tissue, and in part even before that event, the development of mesen- chyme is observable. The primitive segment (fig. 194) in this case is differentiated from the start into two equally distinct fundaments, of which the one is designated as sclerotome or skeletogenous layer (sk), the other as muscle-plate (nip). While referring the reader to the ninth chapter, I add to the presentation given there a few further statements. Fig. 194.- Cross section through the region of the pronephros of a Selachian embryo, in which the muscle-segments [myotomes] (rnp) are in process of being constricted off. Diagram after WIJHE. nr, Neural tube ; ch, chorda ; ao, aorta ; sch, sub- notochordal rod ; mp, muscle-plate of the primitive segment ; w, zone of growth, where the muscle-plate bands around into the cutis- plate (cp) ; vb, tract connecting the primitive segment with the body-cavity, out of which are developed, among other things, the meso- nephric tubules (fig. 205 «&) ; sk, skeleto- genous tissue, which arises by a proliferation from the median wall of the connecting tract vb ; vn, pronephros ; mkl, mk*, parietal and visceral middle layer, from whose walls mesenchyme is developed ; Ih, body-cavity ; ik, entoblast. THE ORGANS OF THE MIDDLE GERM-LAYER. 349 In the Selachians the skeletogenons layer, the origin of which has already been described, grows upward at the side of the chorda (fig. 195 Vr). Outside of this layer one finds the part of the primitive segment which serves for the formation of muscle. This consists of an inner layer (mp') and an outer layer (nip), which are separated from each other by the remnant of the cavity of the primitive segment (fig. 194 7i). The inner layer (fig. 195 mp') is in contact with the skeletogenous tissue (Vr), and is composed of numerous, superposed, spindle-shaped cells, which are arranged longitudinally and give rise to transversely striped muscle-fibrillae ; they correspond to the inner wall of the primitive segment in the larvae of Amphioxus (fig. 189) and Cyclostomes, which is in direct contact with the chorda. The outer layer lies in contact with the epidermis, and remains for a long time composed of cubical epi- thelial cells. Dorsally and ventrally it bends around into the muscle - forming layer, and here contributes to the enlargement of the latter, as in Amphioxus and the Cyclostomes, by its cells becoming longer and being metamorphosed into muscle-fibres (fig. 185). The muscle - plate then spreads out farther into the wall of the trunk both above and below (figs. 185 and 205) At the same time its cavity (myoccel) gradually disappears. The muscle-forming layer (fig. 185 mp') continues to increase in thickness, since the number of muscle-fibres becomes greater ; the outer layer also loses, rather late it is true, its epithelial character, and is con- cerned on the one hand in the development of the corium (fig. 205 cp), while on the other it furnishes an additional outer, thin muscle- lamella. This observation, made by BALFOUR, has often been called in question, but has recently been confirmed by VAN WUHE. In Reptiles, Birds, and Mammals the proliferation of the primitive segments which furnishes the skeletogenous tissue is still more extensive than in Selachians. Thereby the muscle-plate, or the dorsal plate, as it is also called, is crowded farther away from the Fig. 195. —Horizontal longitudinal section through the trunk of an embryo of Scyllium, after BALFOUR. The section is made at the height of the chorda, and shows the separation from the muscle-plates of the cells which form the bodies of the vertebrae. ch, Chorda ; ep, epidermis ; Vr, fundament of the bodies of the vertebrae ; mp, outer cell-layer of the primitive segment ; mp', portion of the primi- tive segment which has already been differentiated into longitudinal muscles (muscle-plate). 350 EMBRYOLOGY. chorda. The differentiation of muscle-fibres follows at a much later stage of development, in comparison with Amphioxus and the Cyclo- stomes. The inner layer of the muscle-plate is converted into longitudinal muscle-fibres, the outer contributes to the formation of the cormm (fig. 202). Let us now consider somewhat more in detail the original condition of the musculature. It shows at the beginning complete uniformity in all classes of Vertebrates. Everywhere there appears as its foundation a very simple system of longitudinal contractile fibres, which first appear near the chorda and neural tube and spread themselves out thence dorsally toward the back and ventrally in the wall of the belly. The muscle-mass is divided in a very uniform manner into separate segments or myomeres by means of connect ive- tissue partitions (ligamenta intermuscularia), which run transversely or obliquely to the vertebral column. In the lower Vertebrates this condition persists, in the higher ones it gives place to a more complicated arrangement. We cannot recount more precisely the details of the manner in which the groups of muscles of the higher Vertebrates, so various in form and position, are derived from the original system, especially since this field of embryology has been as yet little cultivated ; let attention be here called to only two points, which come in question in the differentiation of the groups of muscles. First, a very important factor is furnished in the development of the skeleton, which with its processes affords points of attachment for muscle-fibres. Some of these find in this way opportunity to detach themselves from the remaining mass. Secondly, the development of the lirnbs, which arise as protuberances at the side of the trunk (figs. 157 and 158), operates toward a greater differentiation of the musculature. The limbs likewise ac- quire their musculature, which in the higher Vertebrates has a very complicated arrangement, from the primitive segments, as has been learned through the investigations of KLEINENBERG and BALFOUR, as well as recently through the very convincing accounts of DOHRX. In the Selachians, in which the processes are most clearly recog- nisable, cell-buds sprout forth out of the still hollow primitive segments and grow into the paired and median fins, in which they become meta- morphosed into muscle- fibres. The fact tliat always from a large number of primitive segments buds are given off to a fin is worthy of attention, because it demonstrates that the extremity is a structure that belongs to several somites. THE ORGANS OF THE MIDDLE GERM-LAYER. 351 B. The Segments of the Head. Important works on the development of the head have appeared in late years by GOETTE, BALFOUR, MARSHALL, WIJHE, FRORIEP. RABL, and others. They have led to the important conclusion that the head is made up of a large number of segments, in the same manner as the trunk. These conditions are most evident in the Selachians. When in these animals the middle germ-layers have grown into the fundament of the head, they here, as in the trunk, early separate from each other, and thus embrace on either side a narrow, fissure- like space, the head-cavity. This is continuous posteriorly with the general body-cavity. It follows from this that the two primitive body-sacs (codom-sacs) possess S EMBRYOLOGY. by the ingrowth of embryonic connective tissue, and comes to lie very deep (fig. 202 wd and fig. 205 ug). This canal has acquired a number of different names, and is cited in the literature as pro- nephric, mesomphric, Woljfian, or segmented duct. The different designations are explainable from the fact that the canal alters its function in the course of the development of the nephridial system serving at first as an outlet for the proncphros only, ;ifti r\\;u-ds for the meson* -pi i n>-. Views concerning the origin of the canal were for a time conflicting. According to one supposition, which a few years ago almost all investigators entertained, the longitudinal canal of the pronephros, when it had been constricted off from the parietal wall of the body- cavity, protruded with its posterior end as a free knob into the space between outer and middle germ-layers, and gradually grew out inde- pendently, by multiplication of its own cells, as far as the hind gut (proctodseum). It was said, therefore, to be constricted off from neither the outer nor the middle germ-layers, nor yet to derive from them cell-material for its increase. This interpretation has recently become untenable. As is reported in an entirely trustworthy manner concerning several different classes of Vertebrates, — for Selachians (WiJHE, RABL, BEARD), for Amphibia (PERENYI), for Reptiles (MiTsuKUiu), and for Mammals (HENSEN, FLEMMING, GRAF SPEE), — the posterior end of the pronephric duct in process of growth is in these cases by no means an entirely isolated structure, but is in close union with the outer germ-layer. Attention has already been called to this fact apropos of the development of the pronephros. In a Selachian embryo the condition which is repre- sented in fig. 197 is soon followed by a condition (fig. 198) in which, in a series of cross sections, the pronephric duct now appears as a ridge-like thickening of the outer germ-layer. By a study of various older embryos it can be further established, that the ridge-like thick- ening of the outer germ-layer is prolonged backwards by means of cell-proliferation in that layer, while in front it is being constricted off from the parent-tissue. The pronephric duct therefore grows at the expense of the outer germ-layer, and moves as it were along the latter, with its terminal opening behind, as far as to the hind gut. When HENSEN, FLEMMING, and GRAF SPEE made their observations on Mammals, they were thereby led to adopt the view that the mesonephric duct, as well as the whole urinary system, was derivable from the outer germ-layer. The union with the middle germ-layer they regarded as one that had arisen secondarily. But their concep- THE ORGANS OF THE MIDDLE GERM-LAYER. 359 lion cannot be brought into unison with the conditions of the pro- nephros which have been found in the remaining and especially in the lower Vertebrates (Selachians, Teleosts, Amphibia, Birds) ; on the other hand allowance is made for all observations, if we sum- marise them as follows : that the pronephros is developed from the " middle plate," and that then its posterior end comes into union with the outer germ-layer and in conjunction with the latter grows farther backward as the pronephric duct. If this explanation, which has also been expressed by WIJHE and R.UCKERT, is correct, then one can designate_^e_p_r^qnephric^bLict at its first appearance as a short canal-like perforation of the wall of the body, which begins in the body-cavity with one or several inner ostia and opens out upon the skin by a single external orifice.. Originally the outer and inner openings lay near together, later they moved so far apart that the outer opening of the canal united with the hind gut. It may be said, in favor of the view here presented, that in the Cvclostomes the more primitive condition, that is to say, the union with the skin, has _beeii preserved. For in them the mesonephric duct opens to the outside at the abdominal pore. That openings should arise between the cavities of the body and its outer surface is in no way remarkable, I call to mind the intestinal tube, at various places in the territory of which there are formed openings, as mouth, anus, and branchial clefts. Still more frequent are passages through the body-wall of Invertebrates. As such, arise the openings at the tips of the hollow tentacles of the Actinia, on the ring-canal of the Medusae, and the canals (segmental organs) which in Worms lead out from the body-cavity and serve for the elimination of the sexual products and the excretions. (6) The Mesomplvros. (Wolffian Body.) Following upon the origin of the pronephric system there is de- veloped in all Vertebrates, after the lapse of a longer or shorter interval of time, a still more voluminous gland, serving for the secre- tion of urine, the primitive kidney (mesonephros) or Wolffian body. It is developed earlier in those cases in which the fundament of the pronephros is from the beginning only rudimentary, as in the Sela- chians and Amniota ; it appears relatively late, on the contrary, in those Vertebrates in which the pronephros attains to a temporary functional activity, as in the Amphibia and Teleosts. The mesonephros is established on the portion of the pronephric 360 EMBRYOLOGY. luct immediately behind the prmK'phrir tubule-. The duet con- sequently serves from this time forward as an outlet for the newly formed glandular organ also, and can therefore be designated as mesonephric or Wolffian duct. When it is stated that a gland is developed on the mesonephrio duct, one at first thinks that lateral buds grow out from its wall and give forth branches, as occurs in the fundaments of glands formed from the outer or the inner germ-layers. Nothing of the kind takes place here. All observers — with the exception of a few earlier investigators — agree rather that the glandular tubules of the meso- nepbros arise independently of the im-soiicplipic duct. The source THE ORGANS OF THE MIDDLE GERM-LAYER. 361 of its material is either directly or indirectly the epithelium of the body-cavity, as it has been possible to prove in many cases — in Cyclostomes, Selachians, Amphibia, and Amniota. There are formed, following one another in immediate succession, short transverse tubules (fig. 202 st), which are at one end continuous with the epithelium of the body-cavity, and at the other end, which remains for a long time closed, are joined to the mesonephric duct (wd\ Tig. 203. — Embryo of a Dog of 25 days, btiui^iuened out and seen from in front, after BLSCHOFF. Magnified 5 diameters. d, Intestinal tube ; ds, yolk-sac ; al, allantois ; un, mesonephros ; I, the two lobes of the liver, with the lumen of the vena omphalomesenterica between them ; ve, he, anterior and posterior extremities ; h, heart ; m, mouth ; au, eye ; g, olfactory pit. which runs close to them, but somewhat more laterad. The mesone- phros elongates from before backward and attains a great length on both sides of the mesentery, for it reaches back from the region of the liver nearly to the posterior end of the body-cavity ; it acquires a very delicate, regular condition, as the figure of an embryo Dog twenty-five days old shows (fig. 203 un), and can be designated as a comb-shaped gland, composed of a lateral collecting tube, running lengthwise of the body at a little distance from the mesentery, and, 362 EMBRYOLOGY. attached to the median side of it, short transverse branches, which we shall designate as mesonephric tubules. Whereas there can no longer exist any doubt about the origin of the mesonephric tubules from the middle germ-layer, the statements concerning the method of their formation are still at variance with one another. In accordance with the fundamental investigations of SEMPER, it was generally believed that the mesonephric tubules either werev evaginated in metameric sequence along the dorsal wall of the body-cavity out of its epithelial lining, or grew forth as originally solid buds, as glandular sacs do from the outer or inner germ-layer. This view, according to the more recent investigations of SEDGWICK, WIJHE, and RtiCKERT for the Selachians and the three higher classes of Vertebrates, is no longer adequate. In these cases the development of the mesonephric tubules is intimately connected with that of the primitive segments. When the latter begin to be more sharply sepaiated from the lateral plates, there arises at the place of con- striction a narrow stalk, which maintains for a time a connection between the two parts (fig. 204 vb). In the Selachians it possesses a small cavity, which unites the cavity of the primitive segment with the body-cavity. In the Amniota it is solid (fig. 200). Inasmuch as the successive cords (stalks) are here closely pressed together, they appear like a continuous cell-mass interpolated between primitive segment and lateral plate, and have been previously mentioned under the name of the middle plate. On account of its relation to the meso- nephric tubules, the middle plate is also designated as mesonephric blastema. The mesonephric duct, split off from the outer germ- layer, is to be seen taking its way on the lateral side of and close to the connecting stalks of the primitive segments. Each of the connecting stalks, which RUCKERT namvs at once nepkrotome, — in contradistinction to the remaining parts of the primitive segment , which produce the muscle-plate (myotome) and the cell-material for the skeletogenous tissue (sclerotomeX^jg afterwards metamorphosed into a mesonephric tubule. Whereas one of its ends remains con- nected with the body-cavity, the other becomes separated from the primitive segment (fig. 205 ukl), then applies itself closely to the mesonephric duct; fuses with_ the_ wall jof the latter, and opens into it. In the diagram (fig. 205) the detachment of the connecting stalk from the primitive segment is shown on the right, the fusion of the detached end with the mesonephric duct on the left. According to this whole process of development the mesonephros is from the very THE ORGANS OF THE MIDDLE GERM-LAYER. 363 ^beginning a segmentally formed organ, as can be best followed in the Selachians; for each mesonephric canal is developed in a single segment. In Reptiles, Birds, and Mammals the connecting stalks are solid Fig. 204. Fig. 205. Figs. 204 and 205. — Diagrams of cross sections through a younger and an older embryo Selachian to show the development of the principal products of the middle germ-layer. After WIJHE, with some alterations. Fig. 204.— Cross section through the region of the pronephros of an embryo in which the muscle- segments (mp) are in process of being constricted off. Fig. 205.— Cross section through a somewhat older embryo, in which the muscle-segments have just been constricted off. nr, Neural tube; ck, chorda; ao, aorta; sch, subnotochordal rod; mp, muscle-plate of the primitive segment ; iv, zone of growth where the muscle-plate bends around into the cutis- plate (cp) ; rb, the connecting piece which unites the primitive segment to the walls of the body-cavity, and from which are developed, among other things, the mesonephric tubules (fig. 205 uk) ; sk, skeletogenous tissue, which arises by a proliferation of the median wall of the connecting piece vb ; vn, pronephros ; mk\ mk2, parietal and visceral middle layer, out of which mesenchyma is developed ; Ih, body-cavity ; ik, entoblast ; h, cavity of the primitive segment ; uk, mesonephric tubules, which have arisen from the connecting piece vb of the diagram fig. 204 ; uk1, the place where the mesonephric tubule has been detached from the primitive segment ; ug, mesonephric duct, with which, on the left side of the figure, the mesonephric tubule has united ; tr, union of the mesonephric tubule with the body-cavity (nephridial funnel) ; mes1, mes*, mesenchyma that has arisen from the parietal and visceral middle layers. cords of cells (mesonephric cords). It is only when they have de- tached themselves from the primitive segment, and their blind ends have united with the mesonephric duct, that they acquire a small cavity (fig. 202 si). Now they also become more readily distin- guishable as separate canals, since they become farther removed from 364 EMBRYOLOGY. one another and are marked off from the surrounding tissue by sharper contours. Although it is often stated that in the Amniota the mesonephric tubules " are differentiated out of" the middle plate or the mesonepErIc"'bTas'tema, it is nevertheless to be observed that this is not a case of new formation out of undifferentiated cell-material.,. The so-called middle plate at the time of its origin, in the manner previously described, is at once separated into se^mentally arranged cords, which are afterwards metamorphosed into the mesonephric tubules. The differentiation out of a blastema is therefore here, as in most cases, to be conceived of as an increase in the distinctness of already esta- blished structures, which constitute a cell-mass that appears undifferentiated, but only on account of our limited means of discrimination. In the Amphibia, Teleosts, and Ganoids the origin of the mdsonephros •deserves to be subjected to renewed investigation from the recently acquired points of view. Soon after their union with the mesonephric duct the individual mesonephric tubules begin to grow somewhat in length, to take on S-shaped curves, and to be differentiated into three regions. The middle region undergoes a vesicular enlargement and is converted into a BOWMAN'S capsule. Individual transverse branches from the primitive aortse, which pass along close to the mesonephros, make their way to the capsules, and are there resolved into a tuft of capillaries. The knot of blood-vessels, or glomerulus, now grows into the epithelial vesicle, the median wall of which is pushed before it and invaginated into the interior. During this process the epithelial cells of the invaginated part of the wall become greatly flattened, whereas upon the opposite uninvaginated side they re- main tall and cuboiclal. Such a structure, consisting of a vascular glomerulus and the enveloping BOWMAN'S capsule, is called a Mal- nicjhian corpuscle^ an organ that is exceedingly characteristic of the primitive kidney (mesonephros) and the permanent kidney (meta- nephros) of Vertebrates. In addition to the enlarged middle part, there is to be distinguished on each mesonephric tubule a narrow connecting portion, which continues to increase in length, running to the mesonephric duct, and, secondly, a short portion connecting with the body-cavity. The latter is metamorphosed in different ways in the separate\classes of Verte brates. In some, as in many of the Selachians, it retains its original connection with the body-cavity even in the adult animals ; it begins at the peritoneum with an opening, surrounded with ciliate cells, which was discovered by SEMPER and has been designated nephridial funnel or nephrostome, and which in many respects recalls the THE ORGANS OF tfHE MIDDLE GERM-LAYER. 365 similar structures of the excretory organs of segmented Worms. In the most of the Vertebrates, however, special nephridial funnels are no longer developed^ inasmuch as the mesonephric tubules soon after their origin completely detach themselves from the epithelium of the Dody-cavity as well as from the primitive segments, and thereby lose all relation to the body cavity. A mesonephros in the simple form in which it is at first produced develop- mentally is retained permanently only in Bdellostoma, a representative of the Cyclostomes. It here consists, as JO- HANNES MULLER has shown, of an elon- gated canal (fig. 206 A and B a) and short transverse tubules (b), which open into it at short intervals. The latter are no longer connected with the body-cavity by means of a nephridial funnel, but they enclose a vascular glomerulus at their blind end (fig. 206 B c), which is some- what set off by a constriction. In all remaining Vertebrates the meso- nephros is metamorphosed into a more voluminous and more complicated organ . For the originally short tubules, which run transversely into the mesonephric duct, begin to grow in length, and at the same time to be thrown into numerous folds (fig. 207 s.t). Moreover there are formed mesonephric tubules of a second and third order. These again are also formed independently of the mesonephric duct dorsal to the first-formed transverse duct a tubule Fig. 206.— Parts of the mesone- phros of Myxine, after J. MULLER. a, Mesonephric duct ; b, mesone- phric tubules ; c, glomerulus ; d, afferent artery ; e, efferent artery. B a part of A more highly mag- nified. tubules; their blind ends approach the primary urinary tubule and join its ter- minal part, which is thereby converted into a collecting tube. At the same time a Malpighian body is formed on each of them also. Still more exhaxistive investigations concerning the formation of the second ary and tertiary mesonephric tubules, especially for the higher Vertebrates, appear to me to be desiiable. In the Selachians, according to the statements 366 EMBRYOLOGY. of BALFOUB, which are also confirmed by others, the epithelium of the already existing Malpighian glomeruli- is the starting-point of a proliferation. Cell-buds grow out from the latter and toward the urinary tubules lying in front of them, with which their blind ends fuse. After this union has been effected they detach their other ends from the parent-tissue. Through the development of compound urinary tubules, each of the branches of which is provided with a Malpighian corpuscle, the primitive kidney (mesonephros) acquires a complicated structure. But this is not uniform in all its parts; ordinarily the condition realised in the most of the Vertebrates is this : the anterior part, which afterwards enters into relation with the sexual glands, retains simple tubules, and only the posterior part passes into a more complicated form by the production of secondary and tertiary fundaments. The more the mesonephros, with its tortuous tubules and its Fig. 207. — Diagram of the original condition of the kidney in an embryo Selachian, after BALFOUK. pd, Mesonephric duct, which opens into the body-cavity at o, and into the cloaca at the other end ; x, line along which the Miillerian duct (lying below in the diagram) is divided off from the mesonephric (Wolffiau) duct^ s.t, mesonephric (segmental) tubules, which on the one hand open into the body-cavity, on the other into the mesonephric duct. further differentiation, increases in volume, the more it becomes delimited from its surroundings and emerges from the wall of the body into the body-cavity as a distinctly differentiated organ, where it forms a protruding band on either side of the mesentery (fig. 210 WK). On a cross section one can recognise in the human embryo also (NAGEL) two distinctly separated regions on each urinary tubule — (1) a larger one, which begins with the BOWMAN'S capsule and is lined with large epithelial cells containing abundant protoplasm, and (2) a narrower region with small cubical elements. The latter is the collecting tubet which unites with other collecting tubes before it opens into the mesonephric duct ; on the other hand, probably the former region alone has the secretory function, as also it is best developed at the time of the greatest prominence of the Wolffian body. The Malpighian gloineruli, likewise, attain at this time in human embryos a remarkable size (NAGEL). THE ORGANS OF THE MIDDLE GERM-LAYER. 367 The further fate of the primitive kidney is very different in the separate classes of Vertebrates. In the Anamnia, i.e., in Fishes and Amphibia, it becomes the permanent urinary organ, through which the excretions of the body are eliminated ; but besides that, it also •acquires relations to the sexual apparatus, upon which, however, I shall not enter until later. In Birds and Mammals, on the contrary, the primitive kidney is functional only a short time during embryonic life ; soon after its establishment it undergoes profound regressive changes, and at last is preserved only in part, in so far as it enters into the service of the sexual apparatus, and, as we shall likewise see later, participates in conducting away the sexual products. (c) The Kidney. (Metanephros.) The secretion of urine is assumed in the higher Vertebrates by a third gland, which is established at the posterior end of the meso- nepliric duct — the permanent kidney. The method of its formation, which appears to differ at first from that of the mesonephros, presents great obstacles to its investigation. It is most accurately known from studies on the development of the Chick through the works of SEDGWICK. At the beginning of the third day of incubation in the Ohick there grows out of the [posterior] end of the rnesonephric duct, from its dorsal wall, an evagination — the excretory duct of the kidney or ureter. There are two conflicting views relative to its connection with the development of the kidney. According to the older view, which is still shared by many, the kidney is formed from the ureter in the manner of an ordinary glandular growth. It is maintained that evaginations take place which give rise to other evaginations, and thus produce the whole parenchyma of the kidney. According to the second view, which has been formulated especially by the more recent embryologists, — by SEMPER, BRAUN, FURBRINGER, SEDGWICK, and BALFOUR, — the permanent kidney is, on the contrary, developed out of two different fundaments, which come into relation with each other only secondarily : the medullary substance with its collecting tubules out of the ureter, the cortical substance with the tortuous tubules and the loops of HENLE, on the other hand, out of a special fundament. According to this view there would be an a'gfS&moat between the development of the kidney and primitive kidney, in as far as in the latter the mesonephric duct and the mesoiiepliric tubules also arise separately, and only secondarily enter into relation with each other- 368 EMBRYOLOGY. by means of fusion. The agreement here indicated is a not unim- portant ground for my giving preference to the second rather than the first view. As far as regards the details of the conditions, they are in the Chick — according to the investigations of SEDGWICK, which BALFOUR has confirmed — as follows : the ureter, which has arisen by an evagi- nation from the end of the mesoiiephric duct, grows into that part of the middle plate which is located at the end of the Wolfnan body in the region of the thirty-first to the thirty-fourth primitive segment. The fundament, however, is not at once and at this place converted into a kidney, but first undergoes, after the ureter has penetrated into it, a very considerable change in position; to- gether with the ureter it grows forward on the dorsal side of the mesonephric duct farther; it meanwhile gradually enlarges, and begins to show internal differentiation only when it has come into this new position. One then sees that tortuous tubules become more and more distinct in the small-celled mass and that in their walls Malpighian cor- puscles arc established. One finds, in addition, that there are evaginated Fig 208.-Kidney and suprarenal from the end of the ureter separate body of a human embryo at the -—--—-———--—-----—-—-—----. end of pregnancy. sacs, which grow out into collecting tub^. ««1 P«*a% later -certainty in regard to this has not yet been established — join the tortuous tublues which have arisen in the cortical portion of the kidney. This voluminous organ, which has soon outstripped the mesonephros in size, is originally composed of individual lobes separated by deep furrows (fig. 208). The lobation is retained permanently in Reptiles, Birds, and some of the Mammals (Cetacea). In most Mammals, however, it disappears, in Man soon after birth. The surface of the kidney acquires an entirely smooth condition ; the internal structure (Malpighian pyramids) alone points to its composition out of indi- vidual portions, originally also separated externally. For the sake of clearness the Development of the three regions, pro-, meso-, and metanephros, has been treated as a whole up to this point. Consequently there have been left out of consideration for the time being other processes which are taking place in the vicinity THE ORGANS OF THE MIDDLE GERM-LAYER. 369 of the fundament of the mesonephros at the same time. These have to do with the evolution of the Miillerian duct and the sexual organs. (d) The Miillerian Duct. The Miillerian duct is a canal which is found lying at first parallel and close to the mesonephric duct in the embryos of most Vertebrates (Selachians, Amphibia, Reptiles, Birds, Mammals). It is a canal that is established in both sexes in the same manner, but subsequently acquires in each a different function. It takes its origin in the lower Vertebrates from the mesone- phric duct, as can be most easily followed in the Selachians (SEMPER, BALFOUR, HOFFMANN). In this case the mesonephric duct becomes enlarged, acquires in cross section (fig. 209 4) an oval form, and pre- sents a different condition in its dorsal (sd) and ventral (od) halves, the latter being at the same time in immediate con- tact with the peritoneal epithelium. The mesonephric tubuies open into the dorsal half, while ventrally the wall is consider- ably thickened. Then a separation of the two parts takes place, which begins at a little distance from the anterior end (cross sections 3-1) and proceeds backward to the point of opening into the hind gut. Of the parts which result from the fission, that which lies dorsally is the permanent mesonephric duct (wd) ; it exhibits at first a broad lumen and receives the urinary tubules (fig. 207 si). Yentrally± between it and the epithelium of the body-cavity, Kes the Miillerian duct (fig. 209 od and fig. 207), which is at first only a narrow passage, but later a much enlarged one. In the process of fission the anterior initial part of the primary- canal (fig. 207 pd), which was described at p. 353 as pronephros and which opens into the body-cavity by means of a ciliate funnel (o), becomes a part of the latter duct, and the ciliate funnel becomes the "oslium abdominale tubae. Also in the case of the Amphibia the Miillerian duct is developed by being split off (FtiRBRiNGER, HOFFMANN) from the mesonephric duct, with the excep- 24 Fig. 209. — Four cross sections through the anterior region of the mesonephric duct of a female embryo of Scylliun canicula, after BALFOUR. The figure shows how the Miil- lerian duct (oof) is split off from the mesonephric duct (sd and wd). 370 EMBRYOLOGY. tion of the anterior end, which bears the orifices leading into the body-cavity. A small territory of the epithelium of the body-cavity immediately adjacent to the pronephros serves for the construction of this portion. The epithelium becomes thickened, owing to the fact that its cells take on a cylindrical shape ; it sinks in to constitute a groove, and then becomes constricted off from the surrounding tissue in the form of a short funnel, which in front remains in connection with the body-cavity by means of a broad opening, but posteriorly becomes continuous with the part of the Mullerian duct that is produced by fission. The pronephric tubules and the glomerulus degenerate. The fission of the single mesonephric duct into two canals lying close together is a peculiar process, which is intelligible only upon the assumption that the mesonephric duct has possessed a double function. Probably it originally served as an outlet for the secre- tions of the mesonephric tubules, and also by means of its pronephric funnel took up out of the body-cavity the sexual products (eggs or «eminal filaments) eliminated into it at their maturity, and con- ducted them to the outside. Similar conditions are often observed in Invertebrates, e.g., in various divisions of the Worms, in which •also the segmental canals, which break through the body- wall, •transmit to the outside both secretions from the body and sexual products. In Vertebrates each of the two functions is assigned to a special canal, one of which loses its communication with the body- cavity, but remains in connection with the transverse mesonephric tubules, while the other retains as its part the ciliate funnel of the pronephros, and thus is adapted to conducting away the sexual pro- ducts (eggs). In Reptiles, Birds, and Mammals the manner of the development of the Mullerian duct is still a subject of scientific controversy. Most observers (WALDEYER, BRAUN, GASSER, JANOSIK, and others) :state that at no time was a process of fission observed. According to their representation the Miillerian duct arises in Birds and Mammals quite independently as a new structure, at a time when the mesonephros is already well developed and has the form of a band- like body ^^e__mesonephric fold) projecting into the body-cavity (fig. 210). One then sees on the lateral face of the anterior region of ^ this body that the epithelium of the body-cavity over a limited area (a') is thickened in a remarkable manner and composed of cylindrical • cells, whereas elsewhere the cells are flattened. The thickened portion of the epithelium sinks down in the form of a funnel and .applies itself closely to the mesonephric duct (y), which is near at :hand. The blind end of the funnel grows from this point backwards independently^ as is usually asserted, by means of the proliferation THE ORGANS OF THE MIDDLE GERM-LAYER. 371 of its own cells, and gives rise to a solid cord, which lies directly between the mesonephric duct and the peritoneal epithelium, which is here somewhat thickened. The funnel produced by the invagina- tion now becomes the ostium abdominale tub%, but the solid cord of cells, which is soon hollowed out and finally opens behind intp-ther cloaca, becomes the Mullerjan duct. If the representa- tion just given is cor- rect in all particulars, the Miillerian ducts in the Anamnia and the Amniota, al- though possessing the same location, form, and function, would still be non- bom ologous organs, because their develop- .ment is different. For the one is split off from the meso- nephric duct, the -other is formed in- dependently by a new invagination of the epithelium. Such a surprising result appears to us, however, upon grounds of compara- tive anatomy, to be Fig 210. — Cross section through the mesonephros, the funda- ment of the Miillerian duct, and the sexual gland of a Chick of the fourth day, after WALDEYER. Magnified 160 diameters. m, Mesentery ; Z, somatopleure ; a', the region of the germinal epithelium from which the Miillerian duct (2) has been invaginated ; a, thickened part of the germinal epithelium, in which the primary sexual cells, C and o, lie ; E, modi- fied mesenchyme out of which the stroma of the sexua'. gland is formed ; WK, mesonephros ; y, mesonephrtc duct very improbable, and therefore the attempt made by some investigators to refer back the conditions found in the Amniota to such as exist in the Anamnia' deserves every attention. This would be possible if the statements of BALFOUR AND SEDGWICK, which have however been called in question by others (JANOSIK), should be confirmed. As we have previously seen, there are two different regions to bo distinguished on the Miillerian duct — an anterior, which is the degenerated pronephros and bears • the < orifice of the tuba. 372 EMBRYOLOGY. and a posterior, which is formed by being split off from the mesonephric duct. Such a double origin BALFOUR AND SEDGWICK endeavor to establish for the Miillerian duct in the Chick also. The part produced by invagination of the peritoneum (fig. 210 z)- they interpret as pronephrcs. A similarity with the latter they find in the fact that this part does not, according to their investigations, consist of a single invagination of the peritoneal epithelium, but of three open invaginations lying one behind the other, which are- joined together by ridge-like epithelial thickenings which after- wards become hollow (fig. 211 gr 2, gr 3, r 2). From this ridge is formed a slightly curved, short duct, which communicates with the body-cavity through three openings. If this explanation is right, the most anterior fundament of the Fig. 211. — Cross sections through two peritoneal invaginations out of which is formed the anterior region of the Miillerian duct (the pronephros) of the Chick, after BALFOUB ANIX SEDGWICK. A is the llth, B the 15th, Cthe ISth section of the whole series. grU, 3, Second and third furrows; r2, second ridge ; vsd, Wolffian duct. excretory system of the Chick, which was described on page 356 as pronephros, must have undergone p. change in position, and, with the appearance of the Wolffian body, have slipped backward somewhat along this organ. As long as this alteration of position is not demonstrated by the study of intermediate stages, the interpretation, however probable it may seem to us, still lacks actual proof. As far as regards the posterior, longer region of the Miillerian duct, SEDGWICK maintains that it arises by being split off from the mesonephric duct. One always finds, according to his researches, the pronephric part of the Miillerian duct in union at its posterior end with the ventral wall of the mesonephric duct. He maintains that it is enlarged at the expense of the latter in somewhat the same manner as the mesonephric duct grows from in front backwards by a proliferation of the outer germ-layer. The cross sections A and B THE ORGANS OF THE MIDDLE GERM-LAYER. 373 of figure 212 exhibit this condition. Figure B shows the place where the ventral wall of the mesonephric duct is thickened into a ridge (md) by an increase of the epithelial cells; upon a cross section (A) made farther forward the thickened part has become detached as a cord (md}, which subse- quently becomes still more isolated and ac- quires a cavity of its own. The condition recalls very clearly the appearances which the cross sec- tions through embryo Selachians (fig. 209) gave. According to the observations of SEDG- 4-1^ ^( -t-l^^ WICK, tner lore, the n nterior end of the Mullerian duct would be derived from the pronephros, but the posterior end by a splitting off of cells from the mesonephric duct. Thus an agreement with the conditions in the non-anmiotic Vertebrates would be established. Fig. 212.— Two sections to show the union of the solid terminal P81^ °^ *^e ^llerian ^uc* "With the mesonephric duct in the Chick, after BALFOUP, AND SEDGWICK. In A the terminal part of the duct is still quite distinctly separate ; in B it has united with the wall of the inesone- phric ducfc ««*, Mullerian duct ; Wd, Wolffian duct. Fig. 213.— Cross sections through the Wolffian and Mullerian ducts of two human embryos, after NAGEL. A A female embryo 21 irm. long. £, A male embryo 22 mm. long. W.g., Wolffian duct ; M.g.t end of the Miillerian duct in process of development. It still deserves to be especially mentioned that in human embryos also the Mullerian ducts (fig. 213 A and B M.g.) during their development have their posterior ends fused for a short distance with the mesonephric duct (W.g.). KAGEL, to whom we are indebted for this fine observation, expresses himself, it is true, against a splitting 374 EMBRYOLOGY. off ; however, the similarity with the conditions found in the Chick and the non-amniotic Vertebrates is not to be denied, and has indeed been emphasised by NAGEL. (e) The Germinal Epithelium. In Vertebrates, at the time when the Miillerian duct is established,, the first traces of the sexual glands are also to be recognised. The 1 a rent-tissue of these is likewise the epithelium of the body-cavity. This acquires — for example in the Chick, which is to serve as the- foundation for our description — a different appearance in the various regions of the body-cavity (fig. 210). In most places the epithelia be- come extraordinarily flattened and assume the condition of the perma- nent " endothelium." Also on the mesonephros, which projects into the- body-cavity as a thick, vascular fold, the epithelium is for the most part greatly flattened, but retains its original condition (1) on its lateral surface along a tract (a) from which, as we have previously seen, the Miillerian duct is formed, and (2) along a tract (a) which stretches from in front backward along the median side of the mesonephros ; the signification of the latter has been correctly estimated by BORNHAUPT and by WALDEYER, who have characterised it as germinal epithelium. From it are derived the germ-cells : in the female the primitive ova, in the male the primitive seminal cells. It is only in the very earliest stages that it is impossible to distinguish, whether the germinal epithelium will be developed into testis or ovary. Differences soon appear, which allow a positive determination. We- shall take up first the development of the ovary, then that of the- testis. (/) The Ovary. The development of the ovary is tolerably well known both in the lower and the higher Vertebrates, except for a few controversial points. I can therefore limit myself simply to the presentation of the results which have been acquired in the case of the Chick and Mammals. At about the fifth day of incubation the germinal epithelium in the Chick increases a good deal in thickness, becoming two to three layers of cells deep. Certain elements in this thickening are promi- nent; they are distinguishable (fig. 210 C and o) by their richness in protoplasm and by their large round nuclei. Because they stand in the closest relation to the development of eggs, they have been designated as primitive eggs by WALDEYER, who was the first to- study them in detail. ; THE ORGANS OF THE MIDDLE GERM-LAYER. 375 Beneath the germinal epithelium there is to be found, even at that time, embryonic connective tissue with stellate cells (E), which are in an active state of proliferation. In this way there arises on the median side of the mesonephros the ovarian ridge, which is separated from the urinary tubules by a small quantity of embryonic connective substance. Changes similar to those of the Chick occur in Mammals, with this difference, that the ger- minal epithelium appears to attain a much greater thick- ness. Fig. 214. — Cross section through the ovary of a Babbit 5 days old, after BALFOUR. Highly magnified. k.e, Germinal epithelium ; u.ei, primitive (or primordial) ova ; ei.b, egg-nests ; bi, connec- tive tissue. kb .In older stages of develop- ment the boundaries between the germinal epithelium, which is in process of rapid prolife- ration and therefore exhibits numerous figures of nuclear division, and the underlying connective tissue become less and less distinct. This results from the simple fact that a process of mutual ingrowth now occurs between the epithe- lium and the embryonic con- nective tissue (fig. 214). I purposely say a process of mutual ingrowth, for I leave it undetermined whether the germinal epithelium in con- sequence of its development grows into the embryonic con- nective tissue in the form of cords and distinct groups of cells, or whether the connective tissue penetrates with its projections into the epithelium. Probably both tissues are actively engaged in the process. In the phenomenon of intergrowth, which continues for a long time during development, two chief stages can be distinguished. At first there arise from the germinal epithelium both slender and stout cords and balls of cells (figs. 214 and 215), which have received from the name of their discoverer the designation PFLUGER'S egg-tubes. Occasionally these are joined to one another by means of lateral Fig. 215.— Section through an egg-nest of a Babbit 7 days old, after BALFOUR. ei, Ovum, the germinative vesicle (kb) of which exhibits a filar network ; bi, connective-tissue stroma ; f.z, follicular cells. 376 EMBRYOLOGY. branches. Together with the connective tissue separating them, they form the foundation for the cortex of the ovary. Afterwards they are covered over on the side toward the body-cavity with a thick continuous layer of connective tissue, which becomes the albuginea of the ovary ; they are thereby more sharply separated from the germinal epithelium (fig. 216 k.e), which is still preserved, even after this, as a layer of cubical cells upon the albuginea. There are two kinds of cells to be found in the Pflugerian egg-tubes : Jollicular cells and primitive ova (fig. 215 f.z and ei). Concerning the source of the former opinions are still contradictory (compare p. 382) ; according to my view both arise from the germinal epithelium. Whereas the follicular cells become by means of an uninterrupted process of division_mqrje^umerp^ primitive ova increase in size continually, and their nuclei become very large and vesicular and acquire a distinctly developed filar network (kb). They rarely lie singly in the cords and balls of follicular cells, but ordi- narily in groups, which are designated as epg-nests. One frequently observes in the nests, as has been announced by BALFOUR and VAN BENEDEN, that several primitive ova become fused into, a common, multinuclear mass of protoplasm— a syncytium. From this there is afterwards developed usually only a single egg. One of the numerous nuclei soon outstrips the others in size and becomes the germinative vesicle, whereas the remaining ones undergo degeneration and are dissolved. It is not to be concluded from these processes that the egg, as is occasionally asserted, corresponds to a multiple of cells ; the condition is more properly to be interpreted as follows : of the tggs contained in a nest, one outstrips the others in its growth and thereby represses them and employs them, in a certain sense as nutritive material, for its own growth. This is a process that occurs very frequently in invertebrates, and in the phylum of the Arthropods has been studied with the greatest detail by WBISMANN. In these cases — the lower Crustacea and Insects — one can see how, step by step, out of numerous primitive ova which are originally contained in a germinal chamber of an ovariole, only one becomes the egg, whereas the others from an early period lag behind in development, then undergo degeneration, and in the form of products of degeneration are taken up as yolk-material into the persisting egg-cell. During the enlargement of the egg-cell the second stage of the process of intergrowth of epithelium and connective tissue is intro- duced : the staye of the formation of the follicle (fig. 216). At the boundary between the meduUary and cortical zones of the ovary the THE ORGANS OF THE MIDDLE GERM-LAYER. 3T7 •surrounding connective tissue, carrying with ib the blood-vessels, grows into the egg-tubes of PFLIJGER (e.sch) and the nests (ei.b), and •divides them all into spheroidal bodies, the individual follicles (/). Each such structure contains a single ovum, that is enveloped on all sides by a layer of follicular cells. The vascular connective tissue that grows around it becomes the follicular membrane or theca folliculi. The resolution into follicles continually advances from the me- e.sch ue e.sch' Tig. 216.— Part of a sagittal section of an ovary of a Child just born, after WALDEYER. H'ghly magnified. Jc.e, Germinal epithelium ; e.sch, PFLL'GER'S egg-tubes ; ue, primitive ova l>ing in the germinal epithelium ; e.sch', long PFLVJGER'S tubes, in process of being converted into follicles ; ei.b, egg-balls [nests], likewise in process of being resolved into follicles ; /, youngest follicle already isolated ; gg, blood vessels. In the tubes and egg nests the primordial eggs are distinguishable from the smaller epithelial cells, the future follicular epithelium. dullary substance toward the germinal epithelium ; however, there are preserved under it for a long time Pfliigerian tubes, which remain in connection with it by means of narrow epithelial cords (e.sch) and contain eggs in process of development. The formation of new Pfliigerian tubes and young ova is a process which continues in the lower Vertebrates throughout life, iDut in the higher appears to be limited to the period of embryonic development, or to the first years of life. In the first case, there being an unlimited capacity for the formation of new structures, 378 EMBRYOLOGY. egg-germs are found,, even in the adult animal, sometimes in the- most widely separated parts of the ovary, sometimes limited to- definite regions of the gland. In the second case the period of forming primitive ova in the germinal epithelium bears a direct ratio to the total number of ova eliminated during the life of the individual. Thus WALDEYER states concerning Man that in the second year after birth the formation of new ova can no longer be shown. Nevertheless in Man the number of ova contained in a single ovary is very great. They have been estimated to number in a. sexually mature girl 36,000. In other Mammals the production of new ova appears to last longer. PFLUGER'S tubes which were still connected with the germinal epithelium and contained small pri- mordial ova have been observed even in young animals (Dog, Eabbit, etc.). However, it has been questioned whether we here have really new structures or only primitive ova that in their development, have remained stationary. It is maintained by VAN BENEDEN with certainty for a few Mammals, e.g., the Bat, that in the sexually mature animal PFLUGER'S tubes and primitive ova still continue to- be produced from the germinal epithelium. In connection with the first formation of the follicle I will here- add some statements about its further metamorphosis. This is very similar in the different Vertebrates, excepting Mammals. In most Vertebrates the follicle (fig. 216 f) consists at first of a. small, centrally located egg-cell and a single layer of small follicular cells enveloping it. Soon both are more sharply separated from each other by means of a vitelline membrane. In older follicles both parts have increased in size. The follicular cells ordinarily grow out into long cylinders, and appear to play an important part in the nutrition of the egg. In many animals, e.g., in Sharks and Dipnoi, yolk-granules have been found in them, as in the egg itself, and it has been concluded from this, as well as from other phenomena, that the follicular cells take up nutritive substance from the vas- cular follicular capsule, and pass it along to the egg. Such a method of nutrition is made easier by the fact that the vitelline membrane (fig. 5 z.p) is traversed by tubules, through which the follicular cells (f.z} send protoplasmic filaments to the egg. When the egg has attained its full size, the follicular cells lose their significance as- nutritive organs and become more and more flattened. In the lower Vertebrates the mature ova are generally eliminated in great numbers all at once, frequently in the course of a few days- THE ORGANS OF THE MIDDLE GERM-LAYER. 379 or even hours. The discharge takes place by the rupture of the connective-tissue envelope, which causes the eggs to escape into the body-cavity, as in the Fishes and most of the Amphibia. After the elimination, the ovary, which up to this time was extraordinarily large and took up most of the space in the body -cavity, shrivels into- a very small cord and now encloses only the young germs of ova, part of which are destined to mature during the next year. The formation of the follicle takes place in a somewhat different way in Mammals. The follicle originally contains, as in the remaining Vertebrates, only a single egg and a single layer of follicular cells, which are at first flat, then cubical, then cylindrical (fig. 216 ./). For a long time these cells envelop the egg as a single layer, but Fig. 217 A and B.— Two stages :n the development of the Graafian follicle. A with the follicular fluid beginning to be formed ; B with a greater accumulation of it. «> Egg ; fz, follicular cells ; fzl, follicular cells which envelop the ovum and constitute the discus proligerus; ff, follicular fluid (liquor folliculi) ; fk, follicular capsule (theca fqlliculi) ; zp, zona pellucida. they then grow, undergo division, and are converted into a thick envelope of many layers. But the difference from the course of development described above becomes still greater, owing to the fact that a fluid, the liquor folliculi, is secreted by the proliferated follicular cells, and collects in a small cavity at the side of the eo-g (fig. 217.4 ff). In consequence of a considerable increase of the fluid, the originally solid follicle becomes converted finally into a large or small vesicle- (fig. 217 £), which was discovered more than two hundred years ago by the Hollander REGNIER DE GRAAF and was held to be the human ovum. The structure has also been named after him the ^raafan follicle. Such a follicle (fig. 217 B) now consists of (1) an outer connective-tissue, vascular envelope (fk), the theca folliculi ;, 380 EMBRYOLOGY. {2) lying on its inner surface, an epithelium composed of many layers of small follicular cells (fa), the membrana granulosa ; (3) the liquor folliculi (ff) ; and (4) the ovum (ei), which originally lay in the centre of the follicle, but which has now been crowded tc the periphery. Here, enveloped in a great mass of follicular cells (fzl), it causes an elevation of the wall, — the discus proligerus, — which protrudes into the cavity. When the egg has reached complete maturity its elimination occurs by a collapse of the Graafian follicle, which has then at- tained in Man a diameter of about 5 mm. and causes an elevation at the surface of the ovary. The liquid of the follicle flows out through the rupture and at the same time carries away with it from the discus proligerus the egg, which comes first into the body- cavity, being surrounded by a small number of follicular cells, which still cling to the zona pellucida (fig. 5). The egg is then taken up by the oviduct. Into the cavity of the follicle produced by the flowing out of the liquid an effusion of blood takes place from the ruptured blood-vessels in the vicinity. The blood coagulates, and, accompanied by a prolifera- tion of the adjacent tissue, is converted into the yellow body, or corpus luteum, which is a characteristic structure of the ovary of Yertebrates. Both the follicular cells (membrana granulosa) which are left behind and the connective-tissue follicular capsule participate in this pro- liferation. The follicular cells continue to multiply, penetrate into the interior of the coagulum, and after a time begin to undergo degeneration and to be dissolved into a granular mass. Vascular outgrowths from the capsule penetrate into the yellow body, and at the same time there is an extensive emigration of white blood- corpuscles or leucocytes, which likewise undergo fatty and granular degeneration at a later period. It is of great importance for the further development of the yellow "body whether the egg set free is fertilised or remains unfertilised. For according as the one or the other event supervenes, the corpus luteurn is distinguished as true or false. In the first case it acquires a, much greater size, the maximum of which is reached in the fourth month of pregnancy. It then appears as a fleshy reddish mass. After the fourth month a process of degeneration begins. The products of degeneration, which have resulted from the granular metamorphosis of the follicular cells and leucocytes, as well as from the coagulum of blood, are absorbed by the blood-vessels. Out of the decomposed coloring matter of the blood there have arisen haema- THE ORGANS OF THE MIDDLE GERM-LAYER. 381 toidin crystals, which now give to the body an orange-red color. The connective tissue, originally with an abundance of cells, begins to shrivel, as in the formation of a scar ; as a result of these various processes of degeneration the yellow body, which projects beyond the surface of the ovary, begins to become considerably smaller, and is finally converted into a firm connective-tissue callus, which causes a drawing in at the surface of the organ. When fertilisation has not occurred, the same metamorphosis and processes of growth it is true take place, but the false corpus luteum remains very much smaller. This is probably due to the fact that the afflux of blood to the sexual organs is very much less when there is no fertilisation than in case pregnancy takes place. In addition to the tubes of PFLUGER, — which arise from the germinal epithelium and produce the primitive ova, — in most classes of Vertebrates epithelial cords of another kind and another origin enter into the composition of the ovary. As has been observed by various persons in Amphibia, Eeptiles, Birds, and Mammals, there grow out from the Wolffian body, which lies in the immediate vicinity, epithelial shoots, the "sexual cords of the primitive kidney" and these penetrate toward the developing ovary even as early as the beginning of the intergrowth between germinal epithelium and connective tissue. They arise from the epithelium of the Malpighian corpuscles, as BRAUN has shown for Reptiles, HOFFMANN for Amphibia, and SEMON for Birds. In Mammals, in which at present their sub- sequent fate lias been most accurately traced out, they then unite with one another into a network at the base of the fundament of the ovary, which protrudes as a ridge into the body-cavity, and, pursuing tortuous courses, grow into contact with the tubes of PFLUGER. Whereas in Mammals the cortex of the ovary is de- veloped out of the latter, the former share in the composition of the future medullary substance, and are on that account designated as medullary cords. In the vicinity of the follicle they remain solid, whereas the pait near the primitive kidney acquires a cavity which is surrounded by cylindrical cells. The medullary cords exhibit in different species of Mammals different degrees of development, as the comparative investigations of HARZ have established. In some animals, e.g., in the Pig and Sheep, they reach only to the base of the ovary, and therefore remain sepa- rated from the tubes of PFLUGER by a wide space; in others they grow out into the vicinity of the latter, and in part apply themselves 382 EMBRYOLOGY. closely to them (Cat, Guinea-pig, Mouse, etc.), and take a very prominent part in the composition of the medullary substance. There are two antagonistic views relative to the significance of the sexual cords of the primitive kidney, or the medullary cords, in the formation of ova. According to KOLLIKER and ROUGET the medullary cords early fuse with the tubes of PFLUGEE and furnish to them the cells which become the follicular epithelium. The cells contained in a follicle would, according to this, come from two sources — the follicular cells would arise from the primitive kidney, the eggs from the ger- minal epithelium. Most embryo! ogists dispute this. According to their observations the medullary cords only exceptionally extend close up to a follicle, in many Mammals they do not reach it at all ; consequently not only the primitive ova but also the accompanying follicular cells must be furnished by the germinal epithelium. I also favor the latter view, which appears to me to be best supported by the facts. But what significance the medullary cords have will be better understood when we have become acquainted with the develop ment of the testis, to which we shall now proceed. (g) The Testis. I will at once state that our knowledge of the development of the testis is less complete than that of the development of the ovary. The conditions appear to me to be the clearest in the non-amniotic Vertebr-ata. We possess here the pioneer researches of SEMPER and BALFOUR on the Selachians, and of HOFFMANN on Amphibia. All these investigators have, with one accord, come to the conclusion that th(3 male sexual products, as well as the female, arise from the germinal epithelium of the body-cavity. In males also there is to be recognised in the region of the primitive kidney a special thickened band of tall epithelial cells, in which are imbedded larger cells with vesicular nuclei, the primitive spermatic cells. In the Sharks, the conditions of which I shall make the basis of the further description, they form irregular cords of cells, the " Vorkeimketten " of SEMPER (fig. 218 A). Out of these are developed small, spherical, follicular- like bodies (fig. 218 B), by the ingrowth of surrounding connective tissue into the cords, which are thereby divided up. Thus far, therefore, complete agreement exists in the development of both kinds of sexual products. But whereas in the case of the ovary one cell1 in each follicle increases in size and is converted into the ovum, a like process does not take place in the ma]e; here the THE ORGANS OF THE MIDDLE GERM-LAYER. 383 follicle-like structures become hollow and thus converted into seminal ampullce, whose epithelial cells gradually grow out into long cylinders. The greater part of these become seminal mother-cells, which by many repeated divisions are converted into sixty seminal cells, each -of which is metamorphosed into a seminal filament. Since the filaments derived from each seminal mother-cell always arrange themselves parallel to one another, it is easily understood why before the attainment of complete maturity the seminal fila- ments are found united in great numbers into bundles. Whereas the testis, like the ovary, draws its specific histological components di- rectly from the germinal epithelium, it acquires its efferent ducts from the primitive kidney. As in the female, so also in the male, epithelial shoots, the sexual cords (genital canals of HOFFMANN), grow from the primitive kidney to- ward the testis ; in the Amphibia they arise as proliferations from the cells of the wall of certain Malpighian corpuscles; in the Selachians, on the con- trary, they sprout out in a somewhat different manner from the ciliate funnels. Arrived at the base of the testicular ridge, they are joined together into a longitudinal canal, from which fine tubules are sent still farther into the substance of the testis, where they unite with the structures that take their origin in the germinal epithelium. As figure 218 B shows, the efferent tubules (sc) in Selachians at first apply their blind ends to the ampullae, and enter into open 384 EMBRYOLOGY. communication with them, but only after the maturation of the*, seminal filaments begins. Many differences of opinion still prevail concerning the development- of the testis in the higher Vertebrates. It is true that the presence of a germinal epithelium upon the surface of the mesonephros has also been established in this case by WALDEYER for the male, but its- participation in the fundament of the testis has been called in question. According to the original account of WALDEYER, which is still defended by many investigators, especially by KOLLIKER, the seminal tubules are morphological products of the primitive kidney. However, more recent researches, which it must be admitted do not yet harmonise with one another in all points, indicate that the development of the testis of Reptiles, Birds, and Mammals agrees with that of non-amniotic Vertebrates in the main outlines. In continuation of the work of BORNHAUPT and EGLI, who it is true worked with incomplete methods of investigation, BRAUN has recently maintained for Reptiles, SEMON for the Chick, MIHALKOVICS and JANOSIK for the latter and for Mammals, that in the male also the germinal epithelium begins to proliferate, penetrates into the depths of the testis, and furnishes the primitive seminal cells. The tubules, which according to KOLLIKER and WALDEYER grow into the funda- ment of the testis from the primitive kidney, — the sexual cords, — serve only for carrying away the semen. As stated by BRAUN for Reptiles, and by SEMON for the Chick, they sprout out from the epithelium of Malpighian corpuscles, as in the case of the Amphibia. Although according to these accounts the double origin of the substance of the testis, on the one hand from the germinal epithelium, on the other from the primitive kidney, can no longer be well called in question, nevertheless in the details many conditions, which are still differently described in the higher Vertebrates, demand renewed investigation. Before all else this point should be still further explained : In what proportion do the epithelial cells furnished by the germinal epithelium and those by the primitive kidney share in the formation of the testicular substance ? Are the tubules which produce the semen formed exclusively from germinal epithelium, or is it only the seminal mother-cells which have this origin, while there are associated with the latter indifferent cells from the " sexual cords of the primitive kidney " ? I hold it to be the more probable that the tubules producing the semenr the tubuliseminiferi, are derived from the germinal epithelium; ilietubuli i and the rete testis, on the contrary, from tJie primitive kidney. THE ORGANS OF THE MIDDLE GERM-LAYER. 385 NAGEL has studied the development of the testis in human embryos. Accord- ing to his description also, there arise from the actively proliferating germinal epithelium numerous cords, in which large primitive seminal cells are imbedded. The cords afterwards become the seminal tubules. In Man there prevails from the beginning, as NAGEL remarks, such a great difference between the two sexes, both in the form of the original germinal ridge and in the whole process of its differentiation, that one can recognise in the anatomical structure of the sexual glands from a very early stage whether one has before him a male or a female. (h) Metamorphosis of the Different Fundaments of the Urogenit-il System into the Adult Condition. We have become acquainted in the preceding pages with the first development of the various parts which constitute the foundations of the urogenital system. These are (fig. 219) three pairs of canals — the mesonephric ducts (ug), the Miillerian ducts (mg), and the ureters (hi) — and in addition a great number of glandular structures — pronephros, mesonephros (un), metanephros (n\ and the sexual glands (kd), ovary and testis. It will be my task in what follows to indicate how the ultimate condition is derived from these embryonic fundaments. In this I shall limit myself, in the main, to Man, because we now have to do with more easily investigated, and in general well-known conditions. Fit a human embryo eight weeks old (fig. 220) the fundaments, if we neglect differences which are recognisable only by the aid • of the microscope, are so similar in male and female as to be indistinguishable. All the glands lie at the sides of the lumbar vertebise: farthest forward the kidney (n), which is a small bean-shaped body ; upon this lies the suprarenal body (nn), that at this time is dispropor- tionately large and is to be seen only on the left half of the figure. Somewhat lateral to the kidney one sees the primitive kidney (uri\ as an elongated, narrow tract of tissue. It is attached to the wall of the trunk by a connective-tissue lamella, a fold of the peritoneum, the so-called mesentery of the primitive kidney. In the middle of the gland it is rather broad, but above, toward the diaphragm, it is elongated into a narrow band, which KOLLIKER has described as the diaphragmatic ligament of the primitive kidney. Upon careful examination one also observes at the lower end of the primitive kidney a second fold of the peritoneum, which runs from it to the inguinal region (figs. 219 and 220 yJi). It encloses a firm strand of connective tissue, a kind of ligament, that is destined to play a 25 386 EMBRYOLOGY. part in the development of the female and male sexual organs — the -iniguinal ligament of the primitive kidney. It subsequently becomes in man the gubernaculum Hunteri^in woman the round ligament of the uterus (ligamentum teres uteri). On the median side of the primitive kidney is found either the testis or the ovary (kd), according to the sex of the embryo, both sexual organs still being at this time small oval bodies. They also possess me- senteries of their own, a mesorchium or meso- varium, by means of which they are con- nected with the root of the primitive kidney. As long as the sexual organs retain their posi- tions on each side of the lumbar vertebrae, the blood-vessels that supply them run in an exactly transverse direc- tion : the arteria spor- matica from the aorta to the ovary or the testis, the vena sperma- tica from the gland to the vena cava inferior. The various efferent ducts lie cl' Tig. 219.— Diagram of the indifferent fundament of the urogenital system of a Mammal at an early stage. •*i, Kidney ; Jed, sexual gland ; un, primitive kidney ; ug, mesonephric duct ; mg, Miillerian duct ; mg', its an- terior end ; gh, gubernaculum Hunteri (mesonephric inguinal ligament); hi, ureter; hi', its opening into the urinary bladder ; ug", mg", openings of the mesone- -phric and Miillerian ducts into the sinus urogenitalis (tug) ; md, rectum ; cl, cloaca ; ghS, sexual eminence ; gw, sexual ridges ; cl', external orifice of the cloaca ; •hbl, urinary bladder; hbl', its elongation into the nrachus (the future lig. vesico-umbilicale). at this time close together at the margin of the mesone- phric fold (fig. 219), the most anterior [ventral] being the Miillerian duct (mg). Farther back- wards toward the pelvis the ducts of both sides approach the median plane (fig. 219), whereby the Miillerian duct (mg) comes to lie for a certain distance on the median side of and then behind [dorsal of] the mesonephric duct (ug), so that altogether it describes around the latter a kind of spiral course. When they reach the lesser pelvis, THE ORGANS OF THE MIDDLE GERM-LAYER. 387 the four ducts are united behind the bladder (hbl) into a fascicle, the genital cord • this union is due to their becoming surrounded, by the umbilical arteries — which have at this time attained a large size, and which run from the aorta on both sides of the bladder up to the umbilicus — and to their being, as it were, tied up into a bundle by them. In a cross section through the genital cord (fig. 228) we find the mesonephric ducts (ug) some- what more anterior [ventral] and at the same time farther apart than the Miillerian ducts (ing), which are a little behind them and pressed quite close together in the median plane. In older embryos there arise in the evolution of the urogenital system differences between the two sexes which are visible even externally and which become more distinct from month to month. These result from fundamental metamorphoses, which the whole apparatus continually undergoes in its separate parts. In connection with this some originally quite large fundaments undergo almost complete degeneration; of those which remain some are serviceable only in the female, others only in the male ; when not employed, they disappear. Moreover the conditions which were referred to at the beginning of the description are extensively altered by the fact that the sexual organs surrender their original position, on either side of the lumbar vertebrae, and move farther downward Fig. 220.— Urinary and sexual organs of a human embryo 8 weeks old. after KOL- LIKER. Magnified about 3 diameters, and seen from the ventral side. nn, Right suprarenal body ; un, primitive kidney ; n, kidney ; ung, mesonephric duct ; gk, HUNTER'S directive or inguinal ligament (gubernaculnm Hunteri or liga- mentum uteri rotundum) ; m, rectum ; b, bladder ; kd, sexual gland. into the pelvic cavity. I describe first the changes in the male, then those in the female. (A) The Metamorphosis in the Male. Descensus testiculorum. Whereas the testis (figs. 221 and 222) by conglomeration of the seminal tubules becomes a bulky organ (A), the mesonephros (nh + pa) is retarded in its development more and more, and is at the same time differently metamorphosed in its anterior and its posterior portions. The anterior or sexual part of tJie primitive kidney (nh), 388 EMBRYOLOGY. which has come into communication with the seminal tubules by means of individual canals, in the manner previously described, and has thereby furnished the rete testis and the tubuli recti, is converted^ into the bead of the opididymis. It exhibits in the tenth to the twelfth week from ten to twenty short transverse canals, which are now to be designated as vasa efferentia testis. They unite in the mesonephric duct (fig. 222), which continues to have a straight course, and has now become the seminal duct (si, vas defer ens). During the fourth and fifth months the individual canals begin to grow in length and thereby to become tortuous. The vasa efferentia in this way produce the coni vasculosi, which are at once the initial part of the vas deferens and the tail of the epididymis. Incidentally let it be stated that near the external opening of the vas deferens, as it passes along the posterior surface of the bladder, there arises in the third month a small evagination, which becomes the seminal vesicle (sbl). The posterior region of the primitive kidney (pa) degenerates into very in- significant remnants. In older embryos one still finds for a time, between vas deferens and testis, small, tortuous canals, usually blind at both ends, be- tween which degenerated Malpighian corpuscles also occur. The whole forms a small yellow body. In the adult these remnants are still further reduced ; they produce on the one hand the vasa aberrantia of the epididymis, and on the other the organ discovered by GIRALDES, the paradidymis. The latter consists, According to HENLE'S description, of a small number of flat, white bodies, lying in contact with the blood-vessels of the seminal cord, each of which is a knotted tubule blind at both ends ; each tubule is lined with an epithelium containing fat, and is enlarged at its blind ends into irregularly lobed vesicles. The Miillerian ducts (fig. 222 mg) do not acquire in the male any function, and therefore, as useless structures, undergo n ; the middle region in fact usually disappears without leaving a trace although it has been for a time during embryonic life demonstrable as Fig. 221.— The internal sexual organs of a male human embryo 9 cm. long, after WALDEYER. Magnified 8 diameters. A, Testis ; nh, epididymis (sexuaJ part of the primitive kidney) ; pa, paradidymis (remnant of the primitive kidney); si, vas deferens (duct of the primitive kidney); a, vascular bundle of connective tissue. THE ORGANS OF THE MIDDLE GERM-LAYER. 389 •an epithelial cord. GASSER indeed observed a rudimentary canal of •considerable extent at the side of the vas deferens in a recently born male child. Certain rudiments of the ter- minal portions, on the contrary, are pre- served even in the adult individual, and in descriptive anato- mies are called uterus masculinus (um) and non-stalked hydatids of the epididymis (hy) . The posterior ter- minal parts of the two Miillerian ducts, which lie close to- gether enclosed in the genital cord, are modified into the uterus masculinus (um). Owing to the disappearance of the partition separating them, they are united into a single small sac, which is situated between the openings of the two vasa de- ferentia at the pro- stata and therefore still bears the name of sinus prostaticus. Extraordinarily in- conspicuous in Man, it acquires in many Mammals, in Carni- fir um Fig. 222. — Diagram to illustrate the development of the male sexual organs of a Mammal from the indifferent funda- ment of the urogenital system, which is diagrammatically represented in fig. 219. The persistent parts of the original fundament are indicated by continuous lines, the parts which undergo degeneration by dotted lines. Dotted lines are also employed to show the position which the male sexual organs take after the completion of the descensus testiculorum. n, Kidney ; h, testis ; nh, epididymis ; pa, paradidymis ; hy, hydatid of the epididymis ; si, vas deferens ; mg, degenerated Miillerian duct ; um, uterus masculinus, remnant of the Miillerian ducts ; gh, gubernaculum Hunteri ; hi, ureter ; hi', its opening into the bladder ; sbl, vesiculae seminales ; hbl, urinary bladder ; hbl', its upper tip, which is continuous with the ligamentum vesico-umbilicale medium (urachus) ; hr, urethra ; pr, prostata ; dej, external orifice of the ductus ejaculatorii. The letters nk',h', si' indicate the position of the several organs after the descent has taken place. vores and Ruminants (WEBER), a considerable size, and is differentiated, as in the female, into a vaginal and a uterine part. In Man it corresponds chit-fly to the vagina (TOURNEUX). 390 EMBRYOLOGY. The non-stalked hydatid (%) is developed out of the other end of the Miillerian duct. It is a small vesicle that rests upon the epididymis, is lined with ciliate cylindrical epithelium, and is continued into a small, likewise ciliate canal. At one place it possesses a funnel- shaped opening, which has been compared by WALDEYER to the pavilion of a Fallopian tube in miniature. In order to complete the account of the development of the sexual organs, there still remain to be mentioned the important changes f position which the testis together with the attached rudiments uiulrrgors. Since early times, these have been embraced under the name of descensus testiculorum. Originally the testes (fig. 222 h) lie, as previously stated, in the peritoneal cavity at the side of the lumbar vertebrae. In the third month we find them already_m the grc ater (false) pelvis, in the fifth and sixth on the inner side of the anterior wall of the abdomen close to the inner abdominal ring (tig. 223). In consequence of these changes the nourish- ing blood - vessels, which at first ran transverse^ have altered their direction arid now pass obliquely from below upward, because their original place of attachment to the abdominal aorta and the inferior vena cava remains the same. How is the migration to be explained ? I have already mentioned the inguinal ligament, or the guberna- culum Hunteri (fig. 222 and 223 gh), which puts the primitive kidney, or, when this has disappeared, the testis, into connection with the inguinal region. This ligament has in the meantime become a strong connective-tissue cord, in which non-striate muscles also lie. Its upper end is attached to the head of the epididymis (n/i) ; its lower end traverses the abdominal wall to be inserted into the* corium of the inguinal region. Apparently this gubernaculum plays a part in the migration of the sexual organs. Formerly it was be- lieved that it exercised a traction upon the testis, in which connection Fig. 223.— Human embryo of the fifth month, after BRAMAXN. Natural size. md, Rectum ; h, testis ; nh, epididymis ; si, vas defeiens ; gh, gubernaculum Hunteri with processus vaginalis peritonei ; bl, bladder with lig. vesico-umbilicale medium. THE ORGANS OF THE MIDDLE GERM-LAYER. 391 attention was directed to the non-striate muscle-fibres contained in it, or a shortening of the connective-tissue cord by gradual shrinkage^ was assumed. But it is impossible for this very important change* in position to have taken place in that manner. One therefore^ rightly seeks to explain the agency of the ligament in another wayy without assuming an active shortening or a traction exercised by muscular action. We have to do here simply with processes of unequal growth. When, out of several organs originally lying beside? one another in the same region of the body, certain ones in later* months of embryonic life increase in size less, while others, on the contrary, grow extraordinarily in length, the natural consequence is that the more rapidly growing parts are shoved past those that grow Fig. 224.— Two diagrams to illustrate the descensus and the formation of the envelopes of the- testis. A, The testis lies in the vicinity of the inner abdominal ring. B, The testis has entered the scrotum. 1, Skin of the abcomen ; 1', scrotum with tunica dartos; 2, superficial abdominal fascia; 2\. COOPER'S fascia ; 3, nmscle-layer and fascia transversa abdominis ; 3', tunica vaginalia cornmunis with cremaster ; 4, peritoneum ; 4', parietal layer of the tunica vaginalis propria ;. 4", peritoneal investment of the testis or visceral layer of the tunica vaginalis propria. .r, Inguinal or abdominal ring ; h, testis ; si, vas deferens. more slowly. If, now, in the present case the skeletal parts ancB their accompanying muscles in the lumbar and pelvic regions become elongated, while the Hunterian ligament does not grow and there- fore remains short, the latter necessarily — because one of its ends* is attached to the skin of the inguinal region and the other to the testis — draws down the testis as the movable part; it draws the testis at first gradually into the cavity of the false pelvis, and finally, when the other parts have become still larger, when at the same time the abdominal wall has become much thicker, into the vicinity of the inner abdominal ring (fig. 223). The testis migrates still farther in consequence of a second process, which begins even in the second month. For there is formed at the place where HUNTER'S ligament traverses the wall of the abdomen "an "\ •; :i u'i nation of the peritoneum, the processes vayinalis peritonei 392 EMBRYOLOGY. (fig. 224 A). This gradually penetrates the abdominal wall and enters into a fold of the skin, which is developed in the pubic region, as will be shown in a subsequent section (see fig. 231 gw). The opening of the hernia-like evagination, which leads into the body- cavity, is called the inner inguinal [abdominal] ring (Ir) ; the portion which traverses the musculature of the abdominal wall, the inguinal canal', and the blind end which is expanded within the dermal fold, the scrotum. In its migration the testis (fig. 224 jB) also sinks down into this peritoneal fold, whereby it remains undetermined whether HUNTER'S ligament exercises an influence on it or not. The entrance into the inguinal canal usually takes place in the eighth month, into the scrotum in the ninth month, so that at the end of embryonic life the descent is, as a rule, completed. The canal then closes by fusion of its walls, and thereby the testis comes to lie in a sac constricted off from the abdominal cavity and enclosed on all sides. The various enveloping structures of the testis also become intelli- gible from the sketch of the development just given. Since the eavity which shelters it is simply a detached portion of the body- cavity, it is, as a matter of course, lined by peritoneum (fig. 224 4'). This is the so-called tunica vaginalis propria, on which, as on other regions of the peritoneum, we have to distinguish a parietal layer (4') lining the wall of the sac and a visceral layer (4") investing the testis. Outside of this follows the tunica vaginalis communis (3') ; it is the evaginated, and at the same time extraordinarily attenu- ated, layer of muscles and fasciae (3) of the abdominal wall. Con- sequently it also contains some muscle-fibres enclosed in it, which are derived from the musculus obliquus abdominis interims, and constitute the suspensory muscle of the testis or cremaster. In the descensus testiculorum, which should normally be com- pleted in Man at the end of embryonic life, interruptions may, under certain circumstances, occur and produce an abnormal location of the testis, which is known under the name of cryptorchism. The descent remains incomplete. Then the testes of the recently born child are either found to be located in the body-cavity, or they still stick fast in the wall of the abdomen, in the inguinal canal. In consequence the scrotum feels small, flabby, and flaccid. Such anomalies are designated as inhibition-malformations, because they are explained by the fact that_the processes of development have not reached their normal termination. THE ORGANS OF THE MIDDLE GERM-LAYER. 393 (B) The Metamorphosis in the Female. Descensus ovariorum. The metamorphosis of the primitive embryonic fundaments in the female is in many particulars the opposite of that in the male, inas- much as parts which are made use of in the latter become rudi- mentary in the former, and •vice versa (com- pare with one another the diagra ms .shown in figs. 219, 222, and 225). Whereas in man the mesonephric duct becomes the vas defer- «ns, in woman tJic Miilkrian hbt' duct (fig. 225 t, ut, sch) as- sumes the func- tion of conduct- ing away the ova, while the mesonephric duct (ug) and the primitive kidney (ep, pa) become rudi- mentary. The prone- phric duct in advanced human embryos of the female sex is still demonstrable as an inconspicuous structure in the broad ligament and at the side of the uterus ; in the adult it has, as a rule, entirely disappeared, except the terminal portion, which is enclosed in the substance of the neck of the uterus, where it is distinguishable, but only by means of cress sections, as an extraordinarily narrow tubule (BEIGEL, H. DOHRN). In many Mammals, as in Ruminants and Swine, the Fig. 225. — Diagram to illustrate the development of the female sexual organs of a Mammal from the indifferent fundament of the uro- genital system, which is diagrammatically represented in fig. 219. The persistent parts of the original fundament are indicated by con- tinuous lines, the parts which undergo degeneration by dotted lines. Dotted lines are also employed to show the position which the female sexual organs take after the completion of the descensus. n, Kidney ; ei, ovary ; ep, epoophoron ; pa, paroophoron ; hy, hydatid ; t, Fallopian tube (oviduct) ; ug, mesonephric duct ; ut, uterus ; sch, vagina ; hi, ureter ; hbl, urinary bladder; kbl', its upper tip, which is continuous with the ligamentum vesico-umbilicale medium ; hr, urethra ; vv, vestibulum vaginae ; rm, round ligament (inguinal ligament of the primitive kidney) ; lo', ligamentum ovarii. The letters t', ep', ei', lo' indicate the positions of the organs after the descent. 394 EMBRYOLOGY. mesonephric ducts persist even later in a rudimentary condition, and? are here- known under the name of GARTNER'S canals. There are to be distinguished on the degenerating primitive kidney , as in Man, an anterior and a posterior region (WALDEYER). The anterior region (figs. 225 ep, 226 ep), or the sexual part^of the priniitire kidney, which in the male becomes the rpididymis, is also retained by the female as an organ without function and here becomes tlie parovarium (cj>), which was first accurately described by KOBELT (the parovarium or epoophoron of WALDEYER). It lies in the broad ligament (fig. 226) between ovary (ei) and Miillerian duct (t), and consists of a longitu- dinal canal (ug), the remnant of the upper end of the mesonephric duct, and of ten to fifteen trans- verse tubules (ep). The latter have at first a straight course,, but afterwards become tortuous (fig. 227 ep), in much the same- way as the canals which in the male are converted into the coni vasculosi. The comparison be- tween parovarium and epididy- mis may be carried still further. As in the male tubules grow out from the latter into the cortex of the testis and are there diffe- rentiated into the rete testis and the tubuli recti, so there are also canals found in the female which proceed from the parovarium, enter the medullary substance of the ovary itself, and form here the previously (p. 381) described medullary cords, which are highly developed in many Mammals. The posterior portion of the primitive kidney, which in the male- (figs. 221 and 222 pa) furnishes the paradidymis and the vasa aberrantia, degenerates in the female (fig. 225 pa) in a similar manner into the paroophoron, and is still to be recognised for a long time in the human embryo as a yellowish body (fig. 226 pa), which lies medianwards of the epoophoron (ep) in the broad ligament, and is composed of small, tortuous, ciliate tubules (pa) and a few Fig. 226.— The internal sexual parts of a female human embryo 9 cm. long, after WALDEYER. Magnified 10 diameters. ei, Ovary ; t, Mullerian duct or oviduct (Fallo- pian tube) ; t', ostium abcorainale tubse ; ep, epoophoron (= epididymis of the male — sexual part of the primitive kidney) ; ugy mesonephric duct (vas deferens of the male) ; pa, paroophoron (paradidymis of the male— rudiment of the primitive kidney) ; mk, Malpighian corpuscles. THE ORGANS OF THE MIDDLE GERM- LAYER. 395 degenerating vascular glomeruli (mk). Certain canals and cyst-like structures, which are often found in the broad ligament of the adult close to the uterus, are to be referred to it. The two Miillerian ducts (fig. 219 mg), which from the beginning lie in the margin of the peritoneal fold that serves for the reception of the ovary and subsequently becomes the broad ligament, jmdergo a very profound metamorphosis. It has already been mentioned that as they enter the lesser or true pelvis they approach the median plane, and are joined to the genital cord. We can therefore dis- tinguish in them two different regions, one enclosed in the genital cord, the other lying in the margin of the broad ligament. The Fig. 227. — Broad ligament with ovary and oviduct in the adult condition, seen from behind. ei, Ovary ; t, oviduct ; t', ostium abdominale tubae with finibrise ; f.o, timbriae ovarii ; l.o, liga- mentum ovarii ; x, a portion of the peritoneal investment is dissected away, in order to see the epoophoron (parovarium), ep. latter becomes the oviduct (the tuba Fallopise) with its funnel-shaped beginning (figs. 225>~17~^26, 227 t, t'). The anterior end of the Miillerian duct, which in the embryo reaches far forward and is here enclosed in the diaphragmatic ligament of the primitive kidney, appears in the meantime to degenerate, whereas the permanent opening (figs. 225 2 and 226 i')is probably an entirely new formation. MORGAGNI'S hydatid (fig. 225 hy) is perhaps to be referred to the- anterior rudimentary part — the conditions here have not yet been made entirely clear. This structure is a small vesicle, which is joined, by means of a longer or shorter stalk, with one of the fimbrise of the- funnel-shaped end of the oviduct. Out of the part of the Miillerian ducts enclosed in the genital cord (fig. 219 mg) are formed the uterus and the vagina (fig. 225 ut 396 EMBRYOLOGY. and sch), as THIERSCH and K^LLIKER have shown for Mammals, and as DOHRN and TOURNEUX ET LEGAY afterwards showed for Man. Their formation is accomplished by a process of fusion, which in Man is effected in the second month. When the Miillerijiii duets {fig. 228 mg) are closely pressed together, the partition between them becomes thin and breaks through — at first in the middle of the genital cord. Thus there is developed out of them by an extension of this process a single sac (the sinus genitalis), which is also established in the male as a rudimentary organ, the previously mentioned sinus prostaticus or uterus masculinus (fig. 222 um). In woman it begins to be differentiated in the sixth month into uterus and vagina. The upper portion, which receives the oviducts, acquires very thick, muscular walls and a narrow lumen, and is limited below by a re- entering ring-like ridge — that becomes the vaginal portion [of the uterus] — from the lower portion, the vagina, which remains spacious and possesses a thinner wall. Similarly to the testis, the ovaries also have to pass through a con- siderable change in position : the descensus ovariorum (fig. 225 ei', t'), which corresponds to the descent of the testes. In the third month of embryonic life, at the time when the primitive kidney begins to disappear, the ovaries move from the region of the lumbar vertebrae down into the false pelvis, where they are found medianwards from the musculus psoas. Probably the above -described inguinal ligament of the primitive kidney (fig. 225 rm), which is not wanting in the female, participates in the change of position in this case also. As WIEGER has recently shown, the ligament is differentiated into three distinct regions by the fact that it acquires a firm union with the Miillerian ducts at the place where they meet to form the sexual cord. The uppermost region becomes a strand of non-striate muscle- fibres, which, arising from the parovarium, is imbedded in the hilus of the ovary. This is continuous with the second region, or the ligamentum ovarii (lo')t and the latter with the round ligament (rm) (ligamentum teres uteri). JThe_round ligament, produced from the third and most developed region of the inguinal ligament, extends from the upper end of the genital cord to the inguinal region. Here there is usually, as in the male, a small evagination of the peritoneum, the processus vaginalis peritonei, which occasionally persists even in the adult as the diverticulum Nuckii, and then may likewise be the cause of the formation of an inguinal hernia in the female. At this place the round ligament passes through the wall of the abdomen and ends in the external skin of the labia majora. THE ORGANS OF THE MIDDLE GERM-LAYER. 397 In its last stages the descent in the female is accomplished in a manner different from that in the male. For instead of advancing like the testes toward the inguinal region, the ovaries, when the development is normal, sink down instead into the true pelvis. Here they are enclosed between bladder and rectum in the broad ligament, which is developed out of the peritoneal folds, and in which originally the primitive kidneys, the ovaries, and the Mullerian ducts are imbedded. Naturally the round ligament cannot be of influence during this last stage of the descent in the female, because it can exercise a traction only in the direction of the inguinal region, where it is attached. The descent into the true pelvis seems rather to be due to the conversion of the lower region of the Mullerian ducts into the uterus. At any rate, the ovaries are joined to the uterus by means of a firm cord of connective tissue, the ligamentum ovarii. In rare cases in the female the ovaries can continue to change their position in a manner corresponding to that in the male. They migrate then toward the inguinal region up to the entrance into the processus vaginalis (diverticulum Nuckii); oc- casionally they here cease to advance, but sometimes they enter farther into the abdominal wall through the in- guinal canal; indeed, as has been observed in several instances, they can pass quite through the wall of the abdomen and at last imbed themselves in the labia majora. The latter then acquire a great similarity to the scrotum of the male. Fig. 223.— Cross sectioa through the geni- tal cord, after TOUKNEUX ET LEGAY. The cross section shows the fusion of the Mullerian ducts (mg) ; ug, mesonephric ducts. (i) The Development of the External Sexual Organs. The section which deals with the urinary and sexual organs is really the most suitable place at which to introduce the development of the external sexual organs, notwithstanding they do not arise from the middle germ -layer, but in part from the outer and in part from the inner germ-layer. In order to give an exhaustive account of them, we must go back to rather early stages of development — to the time when in the embryo the Wolman and Mullerian ducts are established. Having first arisen in the most anterior part cf the 398 EMBRYOLOGY. embryo, they grow backwards to the terminal part of the intestine, and there implant themselves in the allantois. This is, as we have seen in the first part of this text-book (fig. 132, 3 and 4 al), an organ which is produced by evagination of the anterior [ventral] wall of the hind gut. In most Mammals (figs. 134 al and 142 ALG) it attains during embryonic life a quite extraordinary development, for it grows out of the body-cavity, penetrates between the other foetal membranes, and is distended into a large vesicle, which re- ceives the urinary fluid secreted by the embryo. The part of it which lies in the body-cavity remains, on the contrary, narrow. The terminal part of it which receives the Wolfiian and Mullerian ducts is called sinus urogenitalis (fig. 219 swj and 229 ug), a structure which will often demand our attention in considering the develop- ment of the external sexual organs. The sinus urogenitalis and the hind gut unite to form a short, unpaired region, the cloaca (fig. 229 cl), a small depression which opens out at the surface of the body and in very many Vertebrates — in the Amphibia, Reptiles, Birds, and the lowest Mammals, the Monotremes — persists throughout life. In the remaining Mammals, however, these structures have only an embryonic existence. In the first cr.se all the elimination - products of the bcdy are conducted to the outside through the cloaca, — out of the hind intestine the fsecal masses, out of the Fig. 229.— Diagram of the urogenital organs of a Mammal at an early stage, after ALLEN THOMSON ; from BALFOUR. The parts are seen chiefly in profile, but the Mullerian and Wolffian ducts are seen from the front. S, Ureter ; It, urinary bladder ; 5, urachus ; ot, genital gland (ovary or testis) ; W, left Wolffian body (primitive kidney) ; x, its diaphragmatic ligament ; w, Wolffian (mesonephric) duct ; m, Miillerian duct; gc, genital cord consisting of Wolffian and Mullerian ducts enveloped in a common sheath ; i, rectum ; ug, urogenital sinus ; cp, genital emin- ence, which becomes the clitoris or penis; Is, genital ridges from which the labia majora or the scrotum are developed. THE ORGANS OF THE MIDDLE GERM-LAYER. 399 sinus urogenitalis the urinary fluid and the male or female sexual products. As far as regards the special conditions in Man, the allantois remains in his case very small (fig. 132, 5 al) and possesses a lumen in the region of the body-cavity only, whereas in the umbilical cord .and between the remaining foetal membranes only its connective- tissue part, together with the blood-vessels, which shares largely in the development of the placenta, grows further. In the second month its hollow part, lying on the front wall of the abdomen. becomes a spindle-shaped body (fig. 229 4). Its middle enlargement becomes the urinary bladder (4), its upward prolongation, which reaches to the navel, is called urachus (5), the other end (ug) is the sinus urogenitalis. The urachus degenerates during embryonic life and furnishes a connective-tissue cord, the ligamentum vesico-umbilicale medium, which extends from the apex of the bladder (fig. 219 hbl') to the navel, and often in the first years after birth still contains an epithelial cord, a remnant of the original epithelial canal. As is well known, the ureters (figs. 229 3 and 219 hi') in the adult _open close together at the posterior surface of the urinary bladder (229 4). In very young embryos this is not the case at first, for the two ureters arise from the posterior part of the mesonephric duct, and this opens into the sinus urogenitalis. But this condition is soon altered. Tin.' ureter splits off from the mesonephric duct, and conies to open independently into the posterior wall of the sinus urogenitalis, from which it afterwards becomes gradually removed, since its orifice, as it were, creeps higher up 011 the posterior wall of the bladder. Like the change in the position of the sexual glands, we must also conceive of this shifting as produced by processes of growth in such a way that especially the tract between mesonephric cluct and ureter, which is at first small, increases in size, and thereby produces the apparent upward migration of the opening of the ureter. In the sixth week the cloaca in Man undergoes alterations which are connected with the development of the external sexual organs. The cloacal depression, which in earlier stages (fig. 230 A) appears fissure-like, afterwards becomes (fig. 230 B) surrounded by a ring- like fold, the genital ridge (gw), and there also arises in its anterior portion a growth of connective tissue, which produces the externally protruding genital eminence (gh). Along the lower surface of the latter there is formed at the same time a groove (yr). which extends downward to the cloaca, of which it is, as it were, the continuation. 400 EMBRYOLOGY. In the following weeks of development the eminence protrudes still more, and thereby becomes converted into the genital member, which is at first possessed by both sexes in the same condition; meanwhile the groove (gr) on its under surface becomes deeper, and surrounded, at the right and left, by projecting folds of the skin, the genital folds (gf). (Compare also the diagrams fig. 219 gh'6, gw, cl' and fig. 229 cp, Is, cl} Alterations follow (fig. 231 M and TF) by which the cloaca is- differentiated into two openings, one lying behind the other, the anu» (a) and the separate urogenital opening (ug). The deep partition (fig. 2-9) by which the sinus urogenitalis and the rectum are separated from each other begins to grow outward, and at the same time folds also arise on the lateral walls of the cloaca and unite with it. Thus a membrane (fig. 231 d) is developed which separates a posterior opening (a), the anus, from an anterior opening, the entrance to the sinus urogenitalis (V/y). Inasmuch as this partition continues to" become thicker up to the end of embryonic life, it finally crowds the- two openings far apart and forms between them the perinoeum (fig. 231 M* and W* d). In this way the anus (a) moves entirely out of the territory of the previously mentioned genital ridge (fig. 230 gw)* From the fourth month onward great differences arise in the develop- nii'id nf the external sexual parts in, male and female embryos. I a tlie female (fig. L'31 W and IF*) the metamorphoses of the originally common embryonic foundations are on the whole only slight ; the genital eminence grows only slowly and becomes the female member, tin- clitoris (cl). Its anterior end begins to thicken and to be marked off from the remaining part of the body as the glans* By a process of folding in the integument there is developed around it (fig. 231 W* vh) a kind of foreskin (the pneputium clitoridis). The two genital folds (W gf), which have bounded the groove on the under surface of the genital knob, take on a more vigorous develop- ment in the female than in the male, and are converted into the labia in.rn.ora ( IF* kxch). The spac;.- between them (W v/;/), or the sinus urogenitalis, which receives the outlet of the urinary bladder and the vagina developed by the fusion of the Mullerian ducts, is called the vestibulum r form a narrow canal, which appears as a prolongation of the narrow sinus urogenitalis, together with the latter is designated as the male urethra, and receives at its beginning the vas def erens and the uterus masculinus ; the two genital ridges, which increase in size for the reception of the testes, surround the roots of the male organ and unite to form the scrotum. 42. The following table gives a brief survey (1) of the compar- able parts of the outer and inner sexual organs of the male and female, and (2) of their derivation from indifferent fundaments of the urogenital system in Mammals : — Male texual parts. Seminal ampullae and semi- nal tubules. (a) Epididymis with rete testis and tubuli recti. (6) Paradidyniis. The common form from which both arise. Germinal epithelium. Primitive kidney. (a) Anterior part with the sexual cores (sexual part). (6) Posterior part (the real mesonephric part). Female sexual parts. Ovarian follicle, Graafian. follicle. (a) Epoophoron with medul- lary cords of the ovary. (6) Paroophoron. LITERATURE. 411 Male sexual parts. The common form from which both arise. Female texual parts. Vaa deferens with seminal vesicles. Mesonephric duct. GARTNER'S canal, in some Mammals. Kidney and ureter. Kidney and ureter Kidney and ureter. Hydatid of epididymis. Sinus prostaticus. (Uterus masculinus.) !> Mullerian duck •! Oviduct and fimbrise. Uterus and vagina. Gubernaculuni Hunteri. Inguinal ligament of primi- tive kidney. Round ligament and lig. ovarii. Male urethra (pars prostatica et membranacea). Sinus urogenitalis. Vestibulum vaginas. Penis. Pars cavernosa urethra. Scrotum. Genital eminence, „ folds. „ ridges. Clitoris. Labia minora. „ majora. The Development of the Suprarenal Bodies. 43. The most anterior part of the mesonephros appears to share in the development of the suprarenal bodies, since lateral branches sprout out from the sexual cords, become detached, and are converted into the peculiar cellular cords of the cortical substance. 44. The suprarenal bodies in the embryo for a time exceed in size the kidneys. LITERATURE. (1) Development of the Musculature. Ahlborn. Ueber die Segmentation des Wirbelthierkorpers. Zeitschr. f. wiss. Zoologie. Bd. XL. 1884. Grenadier. Muskulatur der Cyclostomen und Leptocardier. Zeitschr. f. wiss. Zoologie. Bd. XVII. 1867, p. 577. Hertwig, Oscar. Ueber die Muskulatur der Coelenteraten. Sitzungsb. d. Gesellsch. f. Medicin u. Naturwiss. Jena. Jahrg. 1879. Marshall, A. Milnes. On the Head-cavities and Associated Nerves of Elasmobranchs. Quart. Jour. Micr. Sci. Vol. XXI. 1881, p. 72. Schneider, Anton. Beitrage zur vergleichenden Anatomic und Entwick- lungsgeschichte der Wirbelthiere. Berlin 1879. Sedgwick. On the Origin of Metameric Segmentation and some other Morphological Questions. Quart. Jour. Micr. Sci. Vol. XXIV. 1884, p. 43. Wijhe. Ueber die Mesodermsegmente und die Entwicklung der Nerven des Selachierkopfes. Verhandel. d. k. Akad. van Wetensch. Amsterdam 1883. Wijhe. Ueber Somiten und Nerven im Kopfe von Vogel- und Reptilien- embryonen. Zool. Anzeiger. Jahrg. IX. Nr. 237, 1886, p. 657. Wijhe. Ueber die Kopfsegmente und die Phylogenie des Geruchsorgans der Wirbelthiere. Zool. Anzeiger. Jahrg. IX. Nr. 238, 1886, p. 678. 412 EMBRYOLOGY. (2) Development of tlie Urogenital System. Balbiani. Lecons sur la generation des vertebres. Paris 1879. Balfour, F. M. On the Origin and History of the Urogenital Organs of Vertebrates. Jour. Anat. and Physiol. Vol. X. 1876. Balfour, F. M. On the Structure and Development of the Vertebrate Ovary, Quart. Jour. Micr. Sci. Vol. XVIII. 1878. Balfour, F. M. Ueber die Entwicklung und die Morphologic der Suprarenal - korper (Nebennieren). Biol. Centralblatt. 1881. Nr. 5. Balfour, F. M., and Adam Sedgwick. On the Existence of a Head-kidney in the Embryo Chick and on Certain Points in the Development of the Miillerian Duct. Quart. Jour. Micr. Sci. Vol. XIX. 1879. Beard, J. The. Origin of the Segmental Duct in Elasmobranchs. Anat., Anzeiger. Jahrg. II. Nr. 21. 1887. Beneden, van. Contribution a la connaissance de 1'ovaire des mammif eres Archives de Biologie. T. I. 1880. Born. Ueber die Entwicklung des Eierstocks des Pferdes. Archiv f. Anat. u. Physiol. 1874. Bornhaupt, T. Untersuchungen iiber die Entwicklung des Urogenital- systems beim Hiihnchen. Dissertation. Dorpat 1867. Bramann, F. Beitrag zur Lehre von dem Descensus testiculorum und dem Gubernaculum Hunteri des Menschen. Archiv f. Anat. u. Physiol. Anat. Abth. Jahrg. 1884. Braun. Das Urogenitalsystem der einheimischen Reptilien. Arbeiten a. d. zool.-zoot. Inst. Wiirzburg. Bd. IV. 1877. Braun. Bau und Entwicklung der Nebennieren bei Reptilien. Arbeiten a. d. zool.-zoot. Inst. Wiirzburg. Bd. V. 1879. Brook, G. Note on the Epibiastic Origin of the Segmental Duct in Tele- ostean Fishes and in Birds. Proceed. Roy. Soc. Edinburgh. Vol. XIV. 1888. Brunn, A. v. Ein Beitrag zur Kenntniss des f einern Baues und der Entwick- lung der Nebennieren. Archiv f. mikr. Anat. Bd. VIII. 1872. •Cadiat. Memoire sur 1'uterus et les tronipes. Jour, de 1'Anat. et de la Physiol. T. XX. 1884, p. 409. Cadiat. Du developpement du canal de 1'urethre et des organes genitaux de I'embryon. Jour, de 1'Anat. et de la Physiol. T XX. 1884, p. 242. •Clarke, S. F. The Early Development of the Wolffian Body in Amblystoma punctatum. Studies Biol. Lab. Johns Hopkins Univ. Vol. II. 1883, p. 39. Dansky und Kostenitsch. Ueber die Entwicklung der Keimblatter und des Wolff' schen Ganges im Hiihnerei. Mem. de 1'Acad. des Sci. St. Peters- bourg. Ser. VII. T. XXVII. 1880. Dohrn. Ueber die Gartner'schen Canale beim Weibe. Archiv f . Gynakologie. Bd. XXI. 1883. Egli. Beitrage zur Anatomic u. Entwicklungsgeschichte der Geschlechts- organe. Zur Entwicklung des Urogenitalsystems beim Kaninchen. Dissertation der Universitat Basel. 1876. Emery, C. Recherches embryologiques sur le rein des mammiferes. Archives ital. de Biologie. T. IV. Flemming, W. Die ectoblastische Anlage des Urogenitalsystems beim Kaninchen. Archiv f. Anat. u. Physiol. Anat. Abth. 1886. LITERATURE. 415 Foulis. The Development of the Ova, etc. (1874). Trans. Roy. Soc, Edin- burgh. Vol. XXVII. 1876, p. 345. Fiirbringer, Max. Zur vergl. Anatomic und Entwicklungsgeschichte der Excretionsorgane der Vertebraten. Morphol. Jahrb. Bd. IV. 1878. Gasser. Beitr. zur Entwicklungsgeschicbte der Allantois, der Miiller'schen Gange und des Afters. Habilitationsschrift. Frankfurt a M. 1874. Also Abhandl. Senekenb. Naturf. Gesellsch. Bd. IX. p. 293. Gasser. Beobachtungen liber die Entstehung des WolfE'schen Ganges bei Embryonen von Hiihnern und Gansen. Archiv 1 mikr. Anat. Bd. XI W 1877. Gasser. Embryonalreste am mannlichen Genitalapparat. Sitzungsb. d- Marburger naturf. Gesellschaft. 1882. Gasser. Einige Entwicklungszustande der mannlichen Sexualorgane beim Menschen. Sitzungsb. d. Marburger naturf. Gesellschaft. 1884. Gottschau, M. Structur und embryonale Entwicklung der Nebennieren bei Saugethieren. Archiv f. Anat. u. Physiol. Anat. Abth. 1883. Kaddon. Suggestion Respecting the Epiblastic Origin of the Segmental Duct. Sci. Proceed. Roy. Dublin Soc. N. S. Vol. V. 1887, p. 463. Harz, N. Beitrage zur Histologie des Ovariums der Saugethiere. Archiv f. mikr. Anat. Bd. XXII. 1883, p. 374. Hensen. Beobachtungen liber die Befruchtung und Entwicklung des- Kaninchens und Meerschweinchens. Zeitschr. f. Anat. u. Entwg. Bd. I. Archiv f. Anat. u. Physiol. Anat. Abth. 1875, p. 213. Hoffmann, C. K. Zur Entwicklungsgeschichte der Urogenitalorgane bei den Anamnia. Zeitschr. f. wiss. Zoologie. Bd. XLIV. 1886. Janosik. Histologisch-embryologische Untersuchungen iiber das Urogenital- system. Sitzungsb. d. k. Akad. d. Wissensch. Wien, math.-natunv. Cl. Bd. XCI. Abth. 3, 1885, p. 97. Janosik. Bemerkungen iiber die Entwicklung der Nebenniere. Archiv L mikr. Anat. Bd. XXII. 1883. Kapff. Untersuchungen iiber das Ovarium und dessen Beziehungen zum Peritoneum. Archiv f. Anat. u. Physiol. Anat. Abth. 1872. Kocks. Ueber die Gartnerschen Gange beim Weibe. Archiv f . Gynakologie. XX. 1882. Kollmann. Ueber die Verbindung zwischen Coelom u. Nephridium. Fest- schrift zur Feier des 300jahrigen Bestehens der Universitat Wiirzburg, gewidmet von der Uuiversitat Basel 1882. KupfFer. Untersuchungen iiber die Entwicklung des Ham- und Geschlechts- systems. Archiv f. mikr. Anat. Bd. I. u. II. 1865, 1866. Leod, Jules Mac. Contributions a 1 'etude de la structure de 1'ovaire des rnammiferes. Archives de Biologic. Vol. I. 1880. Marchand. Ueber accessoilsche Nebennieren im Ligamentum latum. Archiv f. path. Anat. u. Physiol. Bd. XCII. 1883. Martin, Ueber die Anlage der Urniere beim Kaninchen. Archiv f. Anat. u. Physiol. Anat. Abth. 1888. Mihalkovics, G. v. Untersuchungen iiber die Entwicklung des Harn- und Geschlechtsapparates der Amnioten. Internationale Monatsschr. f. Anat. n. Histol. Bd. II. 1885. Mitsukuri. On the Development of the Suprarenal Bodies in Mammalia. Quart. Jour. Micr. Sci. Vol. XXII. Also in Studies Morphol. Lab University of Cambridge. Vol. II. 1882. 414 EMBRYOLOGY. Mitsukuri. The Ectoblastic Origin of the Wolffian Duct in Chelonia. Zool. Anzeiger. Jahrg. XI. 1888, p. 111. Miiller, Johannes. Bildungsgeschichte der Genitalien. Dtismldorf 1830. Miiller, Wilhelm. Ueber das Urogenitalsystem des Ampbioxus u. der Cyclostomen. Jena. Zeitschr. Bd. II. 1875. Nagel, W. Ueber die Entwicklung des Urogenitalsystems des Menschen. Archiv f. mikr. Anat. Bd. XXXIV. 1889, p. 269. "Neumann. Die Beziehungen des Flimmerepithels der Bauchhohle zum Eileiterepithel. Archiv f . mikr. Anat. Bd. XI. 1875. Perenyi, J. Die ektoblastische Anlage des Urogenitalsystems bei Rana esculenta und Lacerta viridis. Zool. Anzeiger. Jahrg. X. 1887. Nr. 243, p. 66. Perenyi, J. Amnion und Wolff'scher Gang d. Eidechsen. Math. u. natur- wiss. Berichte aus Ungarn. Bd. VI. 1887-8. Berlin u. Budapest 1889 and Zool. Anzeiger. Jahrg. XL 1888, p. 138. Pfliiger, E. Die Eierstocke der Saugethiere und des Menschen. Leipzig 1863. Rathke, H. Beobachtungen und Betrachtungen iiber die Entwicklung der Gegchlechtswerkzeuge bei den Wirbelthieren. Neue Schriften d. naturf. Gesellsch. Danzig. Bd. I. 1825. Renson. Contributions a 1'embryologie des organes d'excretions des oiseaux et des mammiferes. These. Bruxelles 1883. Abstract in Archiv f. mikr Anat. Bd. XXII. 1883. Romiti, W. Ueber den Bau und die Entwicklung des Eierstockes und des Wolff schen Ganges. Archiv f. mikr. Anat. Bd. X. 1874. Rosenberg, A. Untersuch. iiber die Entwickl. der Teleostierniere. Disserta- tion. Dorpat 1867. Roth. Ueber einige Urnierenreste beim Menschen. Baseler Festschr, z. Wurzburger Jubilaum. 1882. Rouget. Evolution compared des glandes genitales male et femelle chez les embryons des mammiferes. Compt. rend. T. 88. 1879. Riickert. Entstehung des Vornierensystems. Munchener medic. Wochenschr. Jahrg. 36. 1889. Schafer, E. A. On the Structure of the Immature Ovarian Ovum in the Common Fowl and in the Rabbit, etc. Proceed. Roy. Soc. London. 1880 Nr. 202. Schmiegelow, E. Studier over Testis og Epididymis Udviklings-historie. Afhandling for Doctorsgraden. Kjobenliavn 1881. Schmiegelow, E. Studien iiber die Entwickelung des Hodens und Neben hodens. Archiv f. Anat. u. Physiol. Anat. Abth. 1882. Sedgwick, Adam. Development of the Kidney in its Relation to the Wolffian Body in the Chick. Quart. Jour. Micr. Sci. Vol. XX. 1880. Sedgwick, Adam. On the Development of the Structure known as the " Glomerulus of the Head-kidney " in the Chick. Quart. Jour. Micr. Sci. Vol. XX. 1880. Sedgwick, Adam. On the Early Development of the Anterior Part of the Wolffian Duct and Body in the Chick, together with some Remarks on the Excretory System of the Vertebrata. Studies Morphol. Lab. Univer- sity of Cambridge. 1882. Also in Quart. Jour. Micr. Sci. Vol. XXI. 1881. LITERATURE. 415 Semon, Richard. Die indifferente Anlage der Keimdriisen beiin Hiihn- chen und ihre Differenzirung zum Hoden. Habilitationssehrift. Jena 1887. Semper, C. Das Urogenitalsystem der Plagiostomen und seine Bedeutung fur das der iibrigen Wirbelthiere. Wurzburg 1875. Siemerling. Beitrage zur Embryologie der Excretionsorgane des Vogels, Inaug.-Diss. Marburg 1882. Spee, Graf Ferdinand. Ueber directe Betheiligung des Ektoderms an der Bildung der Urnierenanlage des Meerschweinchens. Archiv f. Anat. u. Physiol. Anat. Abth. 1884. Spengel. Das Urogenitalsystem der Amphibien. Arbeiten a. d. zool.-zoot. Inst. Wurzburg. Bd. III. 1876. Toldt. Untersuchungen iiber das Wachsthum der Nieren des Menschen und der Saugetkiere. Sitzungsb. d. k. Akad. der Wissensch. Wien, math.- naturw. 01. Bd. LXIX. Abth. 3, p. 123. Tourneux et Legay. Memoire sur le deVeloppement de 1'uterus et du vagin. Jour, de 1'Anat. et de la Physiol. 1884. Tourneux. Sur les premiers developpements du cloaque, du tubercule genital et de 1'anus chez 1'embryon de mouton. Jour, de 1'Anat. et de la Physiol. T. XXIV. 1888. Tourneux. Sur le developpement et 1'evolution du tubercule genital chez le foetus humain dans les deux sexes. Jour, de 1'Anat. et de la Physiol. T. XXV. 1889. Waldeyer. Ueber die sogenannte ungestielte Hydatide der Hoden. Archiv f. mikr. Anat. Bd. XIII. 1877. "Waldeyer. Eierstock und Ei. Ein Beitrag zur Anatomic u. Entwicklungs- geschichte der Sexualorgane. Leipzig 1870. Weldon. Note on the Early Development of Lacerta muralis. Quart. Jour. Micr. Sci. Vol. XXIII. 1883. "Weldon. On the Head-kidney of Bdellostoma, with a Suggestion as to the Origin of the Suprarenal Bodies. Quart. Jour. Micr. Sci. Vol. XXIV. 1884. Weldon. Note on the Origin of the Suprarenal Bodies of Vertebrates. Proceed. Koy. Soc. London. Vol. XXXVII. 1884, p. 422. Weldon. On the Suprarenal Bodies of Vertebrata. Quart. Jour. Micr. Sci. Vol. XXV. 1885. Wieger, Q-. Ueber die Entstehung und Entwicklung der Bander des weib- lichen Genitalapparates beim Menschen. Ein Beitrag zur Lehre des Descensus ovariorum. Archiv f. Anat. u. Physiol. Anat. Abtheil. 1885. Wijhe, J. W. van. Die Betheiligung des Ektoderms an der Entwicklung des Vornierenganges. Zool. Anzeiger. Nr. 236, 1886, p. 633. Wijhe, J. W. van. Ueber die Mesodermsegmente des Kumpfes und die Entwicklung des Excretionssystems bei Selachiern. Archiv f. mikr. Anat. Bd. XXXIII. 1889, p. 461. 416 EMBRYOLOGY. CHAPTEK XVI. THE ORGANS OF THE OUTER GERM-LAYER. THE outer germ-layer has for a long time also borne the name- dermo-sensory layer. By this its two most important functions are both indicated. For in the first place it forms the epidermis together with its various products, such as hair, nails, scales, horns, and feathers \ and in addition various kinds of glands : the sebaceous, sweat- and milk-glands. Secondly, it is the matrix out of which the nervous^ system and the most important functional parts of the sensory organs, the optic, auditory, and olfactory cells, are derived. I begin with the most important function of the outer gerin-layerr the development of the nervous system, then proceed to the develop- ment of the organs of sense (eye, ear, and organ of smell), and finally discuss the development of the epidermis and its products. I. The Development of the Nervous System. A. The Development qf the Central Nervous /System. The central nervous system of Vertebrates is one of the organs first established after the separation of the germ into the four primary germ-layers. As has already been stated, it is developed (fig. 41 A) out of a broad band of the outer germ-layer (mp), which stretches from the anterior to the posterior end of the embryonic fundament and lies in the median plane directly above the chorda dorsalis (ch). In this region the cells of the outer germ-layer grow out into long cylindrical or spindle-shaped structures, whereas the elements occurring in the surrounding parts (ep) flatten out and under certain conditions become altogether scale-like. Consequently the outer germ-layer is now divided into two regions — into the attenuated primitive epidermis (Hornblatt) (ep) and the thicker median neural or medullary plate (mp). Both regions are soon sharply separated from each other, since the neural plate bends in a little (fig. 41 B) and its edges rise above the surface of the germ. In this way there arise the two medullary or dorsal folds (mf), which enclose between them the originally broad and shallow medullary or dorsal furrow. They are simply folds of the outer germ-layer, formed at the place where the neural plate is- continuous with the primitive epidermis. They are therefore com- posed of an outer and an inner layer, of which the inner belongs to- THE ORGANS OF THE OUTER GERM-LAYER. 417 the marginal part of the neural plate, the outer, on the contrary, to the adjacent epidermis. In all the classes of Vertebrates the medullary plate is transformed into a neural tube at a very early period. This process can be accomplished in three different ways. In most of the classes of Vertebrates, namely Reptiles, .birds, and Mammals, the tube is formed by a typical process of folding. The medullary folds rise still higher above the surface of the germ, then bend together toward the median plane, and grow toward each other until their edges meet, along which they then begin to fuse. The neural tube, thus formed, still continues to remain in connection with the over- lying epidermis along the line of fusion, a connection which soon disappears, since the connecting cells become loosened and separated from one another (fig. 41 (7). The closure begins in all Vertebrates at the place which corresponds approximately to the future mid-brain — in the Chick (fig. 87 hb2) on the second and in the Rabbit on the ninth day of development — and from there proceeds slowly both backwards and forwards. There is retained for a long time, especially behind, a place where the neural tube is open to the exterior. A connection with the intestinal tube by means of the neurenteric canal also exists at the posterior end, as has been already mentioned (p. 126) in the discussion of the germ-layers. It is only at a later period that this connection is interrupted by the closing of the blastopore. The second type in the development of the central nervous system is met with in Cyclostomes and Teleosts. In them the neural plate is transformed into a solid cord of cells instead of a tube. Instead of the folds rising up over the surface of the germ, the neural plate grows downward in the form of a wedge. In this way the right and left halves of the plate come to lie immediately in contact with each other, so that one cannot find the slightest trace of a space between them ; only after the cord of cells has been constricted off from the primitive epidermis do the halves separate and allow a small cavity, the central canal, to appear between them. Probably this modification in the Bony Fishes and Cyclostomes is connected with the fact that the egg with its abundant yolk is very closely enveloped by the vitelline membrane, as a result of which the medullary folds cannot rise toward the surface. The third modification occurs only in Amphioxus lanceolatus. It has already been described briefly in another place (p. 109). The neural tube retains an undifferentiated condition in Amphioxus 27 418 EMBRYOLOGY. lanceolatus only ; in all other Vertebrates, on the contrary, it is differentiated into spinal cord and brain. (a) The Development of the Spinal Cord. The part of the neural tube which is converted into the spinal cord is oval in cross section (fig. 200). At an early period a separa- tion into a right and left half can be recognised (fig. 232). For win* 7 Fig. 232. — Cross section of an embryo Lizard with completely closed intestinal tube, after SAGEMEHL. he, Posterior, vc, anterior commissure of the spinal cord ; vw, anterior root of nerve ; «/, nerve- fibrillae ; spk, spinal ganglion ; mpl, muscle-plate, muscle-forming layer ; imp", outer layt.r of the muscle-plate ; mp3, transition of the outer into the muscle-forming layer. the lateral walls are greatly thickened and consist of several layers of long, cylindrical cells, whereas the upper and lower walls are thin and can be distinguished respectively as posterior [dorsal] and anterior commissure (he and vc), or as roof-plate and floor-plate. The further development, of which I shall mention only the most important points, takes place in such a manner that the lateral halves become thicker and thicker (fig. 233). The cells continue to increase in number by division, and at the same time to be difi'i r- entiatedinto two histological groups — (1) into elements which provide the sustentative framework, the epithelium surrounding the central THE ORGANS OF THE OUTER GERM-LAYEE. 4] 9 canal and the spongiosa (spongioblasts of His), and (2) into elements which are transformed into ganglionic cells and nerve-fibres (neuro- blasts of His). The thickening of the lateral walls depends partly upon the multiplication of cells, but mainly upon the fact that nerve- fibres apply themselves to the cell-mass from the outside. In time these fibres are separated into the anterior, lateral, and posterior columns of the spinal cord (fig. 233 pew, lew, acw). At their first appearance the nerve- fibres are non-medul- lated (fig. 232 nf), and only subse- quently, sometimes earlier, sometimes later, acquire a me- dullary sheath. In this manner the al- ready considerably thickened halves of the spinal cord be- come differentiated into the central gray substance containing the ganglionic cells, and into the white substance, which en- velops the surface of the former like a mantle. Since, meanwhile, the roof- and floor- plates etc grow only a and are not into oic W Fig. 233. — Cross section through trie spinal cord of an embryo Chick of seven days, after BALFOUR. pew, Posterior white column ; lew, lateral white column ; acw, anterior white column ; c, dorsal tissue filling up thv place where the dorsal fissure will be formed ; pc, posterior horn of the gray substance ; ac, anterior horn ; ep, epitheli*- cells ; age, anterior gray commissure ; pf, posterior [dorsai] part of the spinal canal ; spc, anterior [ventral] part of tlid spinal canal ; af, anterior fissure. little differentiated ganglionic cells, they come to lie deeper and deeper at the botton of anterior and posterior longitudinal furrows (c and «/*). Finally, the completely formed spinal cord is composed of large lateral halves which are separated from each other by deep anterior and posterio longitudinal fissures, being united only deep down by a thin trans verse bridge. " The latter is derived from the roof- and floor-plates which have been retarded in their growth, and ««closas in it j the central canal, which has also remained s 420 EMBRYOLOGY. At the beginning — in Man up to the fourth month of embryonic development — the spinal cord occupies the entire length of the body. Therefore, at the time when the axial skeleton is divided up into separate vertebral regions, it reaches from the first cervical down to the last coccygeal vertebra. The end of the spinal cord, however, does not even begin to develop ganglionic cells and nerve-fibres, but TenmTnT throughout life as a small epithelial tube. It is united to the larger anterior portion, which has developed nerve-fibres and ganglionic cells, by means of a conically tapering rogion, which is spoken of in descriptive anatomy as the conus medulkiris. As long as the spinal cord keeps pace with the vertebral column in its growth, the pairs of nerves arising from it, in leaving the vertebral canal, pass out at right angles directly to the intervertebral foramina. In Man, beginning with the fourth month, this arrange- ment is changed ; from that time forward the growth of the spinal cord does not equal that of the spinal column, and therefore the cord can no longer occupy the entire length of the vertebral canal. Since it is attached above to the medulla oblongata, and this together with the brain is firmly held in the cranial capsule, it must assume a higher and higher position in the vertebral canal. In the sixth month the conus medullaris is found in the upper end of the sacral canal, at birth in the region of the third lumbar vertebra, and some years later at the lower edge of the first lumbar vertebra, where it terminates even in the adult. In the ascent (ascensus medullse spinalis) the lower end of the spinal cord, the small epithelial tube which is attached to the coccyx, is drawn out into a long, fine filament, which persists even in the adult as the filum terminate internum and externum. At first it presents a small cavity, which is lined by ciliated cylindrical cells, and which forms a continuation of the central canal of the spinal cord. Further downward it is continued in the form of a cord of connective tissue as far as the coccyx. A second consequence of the ascent of the spinal cord is a change in the course of the roots of the peripheral nerve-stems. Since, together with the spinal cord, their points of origin come to lie in the spinal canal relatively nearer and nearer the head, and since the places where they pass through the intervertebral foramina do not change, they are compelled to pass from a transverse to a more and more oblique course. The obliquity, moreover, is greater the farther down the nerve leaves the vertebral canal. In the neck-region their direction is still transverse, in the thoracic region it begins to be more and THE ORGANS OF THE OUTER GERM-LAYER. 421 more oblique, and finally, in the lumbar region, and still more so in the sacral, it is more sharply downward. On this account the nerve- stems arising from the last part of the spinal cord come to lie for a considerable distance in the vertebral canal before they reach the sacral foramina serving for their exit ; they therefore surround the conus medullaris and filum terminale, forming the structure known as the hor^e-tail or cauda equina. Finally the spinal cord undergoes some changes in its form also. Even in tho third and fourth months there appear differences of calibre in different regions. The places in the cervical and lumbar regions of the spinal cord at which the peripheral nerves depart to the anterior and posterior extremities, grow vigorously by the abundant formation of ganglionic cells ; they become considerably thicker than the adjoin • ing portions of the cord, on account of which they are distinguished as cervical and lumbar enlargements (intumescentia cervicalis et lumbalis). (6) The Development of the Brain. By the study of embryology knowledge of the anatomy of the brain has been greatly promoted. Justly, therefore, in all recent text books of human anatomy, the embryonic condition serves as the starting-point in the description of the intricate structure of the brain, the aim being to derive the complicated ultimate conditions from the more simple embryonic ones, and to explain them by means of the latter. The initial form of the brain as well as of the spinal cord is a simple tube. At an early period, even before it is everywhere closed, it becomes metameric, on account of its growth being greater in some regions than in others. By means of two constrictions of its lateral walls it is divided into the three primary brain-vesicles (fig. 87 hbl, hb2, A63), which remain united with one another by means of wide openings, and are designated as the fore-, mid-, and hind-brain. The posterior of these divisions is the longest, gradually tapering and becoming continuous with the tubular spinal cord. The first stage isTJtlicTEIy followed by a second, and that by a third, since the primary brain-vesicles soon separate into four, and finally five divisions. During the second stage (fig. 234) the lateral walls of the primary fore- brain (pvh) begin to grow outward more vigorously and to evaginate to form the two optic ve^-s (au). At the same time the 422 EMBRYOLOGY. lateral walls of the hind-brain, which from the beginning has been the longest portion, acquire a constriction which divides the hind- brain into two vesicles, that of the cere- bellum (kh) and the medulla (nh\ or cyter-brciin. The five-fold segmentation of the neural tube (fig. 235) soon succeeds the four-fold condition; by means of it the fore-brain vesicle undergoes fundamental transformations. First, the primary optic vesicles (au) begin to be constricted ott trom 'the fore- brain vesicle, until they remain at- tached by only slender, hollow stalks. Since the constriction takes place mainly from above downward, the stalks remain in connection with the base of the fore-brain vesicle. The front wall of the vesicle then begins to protrude anteriorly, and to be marked off by means of a lateral Fig. 234.- Dorsal aspect, by trans- mitted light, of the head of a Chick incubated 58 hours, after MIHALKOVICS. Magnified 40 diameters. x, Anterior wall of the primary fore- brain vesicle, which afterwards evaginates to form the cerebrum ; pvh, primary fore- brain vesicle ; au, optic vesicle ; mh, mid-brain vesicle ; kh, vesicle of the cere- bellum ; nh, after-brain vesicle ; h, heart; vo, omphalomesenteric vein ; rm, spinal cord ; us, primitive segment. furrow, which runs from above and behind obliquely downward and for- ward. In this manner the primary vesicle of the fore-brain, like the hind-brain vesicle,_jssecondarily di- vided into two portions, which we can now distinguish as the vesicles of the cerebrum and the between-brain (gh, zh). The optic nerves remain united with the base of the latter. The vesicle of the cerebrum is distinguished by a very rapid growth, and soon begins to surpass all the other parts of the brain in size. But it becomes divided before this into right and left halves; From the connective tissue enveloping the neural tube there grows down in the median plane a process, the future falx ceivbri. This growth advances from above and in front against the cerebral vesicle and deeply infolds its upper wall. The halves (fig. 236 hms) that have thus arisen are united at their bases ; they present a more flat median and a convex outer surface, and are called the two vesicles of the hemi- spheres, since they furnish the foundation for the cerebral hemispheres. Tin- M'j'arate renion- of tin- bruhi-tulu' product d by constrictions THE ORGANS OF THE OUTER GERM- LAYER. 423 and evaginations subsequently become still more sharply marked oft" from one another, owing to the alteration of their positions Fig. 235.— Brain of a human embryo of the third week (Ly*). Profile reconstruction. After His. gh, Cerebral vesicle ; zh, between-brain vesicle ; mh, mid-brain vesicle ; kh, nh, vesicles of the cerebellum and medulla oblongata ; au, optic vesicle ; gb, auditory vesicle ; tr, inf undibulum ; rf, area rhomboidalis ; nb, nuchal flexure ; kb, cephalic flexure. At the beginning the three brain-vesicles formed by the first constrictions lie in a straight line one behind the other (fig. 87) and above the chorda dorsalis ; the latter extends only as far as to the anterior end of the mid- brain vesicle, where it tapers to a point, But from the moment when the optic vesicles begin to be constricted off, the three primary vesicles shift their positions in such a way that the longitudinal axis uniting them undergoes sharp, characteristic folds, which are distinguished as the cephalic, pontal, and nuchal flexures (fig. 235 kb, nb). The cause of the formation of the curvatures, which are of fundamental importance in the anatomy of the brain, is to be sought princi- pally in the more vigorous longitudinal growth which distinguishes the cerebral tube, and more especially its dorsal wall, from the surrounding parts. As His has established by means of measurements, the fundament of the brain more than doubles its length, while the spinal cord increases by only about one-sixth of its length. The cephalic flexure (tig. 235 kb) is developed first. The floor of the fore-brain sinks downward a little around the anterior end of the chorda dorsalis (fig. 237 ch), and forms at first a right angle with Fig. 236. — Brain of a human embryo seven weeks old, parietal (Scheitel) aspect, after MiHALKOVICS. msp, Longitudinal or in- terpallial fissure (Man- telspalte), at the bottom of which is seen the embryonic lamina ter- minalis (Schlussplatte) ; hms, left hemisphere ; zh, between-brain ; mh, mid-brain ; hh, hind- brain and after-brain. 424 EMBRYOLOGY. ck Fig. 237.— Median section through the head of a Rabbit embryo 6 mm. long, after MIHALKOVICS. rh, Pharyngeal membrane ; hp, place whence the hypophysis develops ; h, heart ; kd, cavity of the head-gut ; ch, chorda ; v, \ entricle of the cere- brum ; v3, third ventricle, that of the between- brain ; v*, fourth ventricle, that of the hind- and after-brain ; ck, central canal of the spinal cord.* the part of the base of the brain lying behind it, but afterwards an acute angle (figs. 235, 238). In consequence of this, the vesicle of the mid -brain (fig. 235 mh) comestolivj highest, and forms a promi- nence, which causes a great protrusion of the surface of the embryo and is known as the parietal prominence (fig. 158 s). The nuchal flexure, which makes its appearance at the boundary between medulla oblongata and spinal cord, is less prominent (fig. 235 nb). It produces in the embryos of the higher Ver- tebrates a curvature which also projects outward, the so-called nuchal prominence (%. 158). The third curva- ture, which has been designated by KO'L- LIKER as the pontal flexure (fig. 239 bb), because it arises in the neighborhood of the future pons Varolii, is, on the contrary, very marked. It is further distinguished from the two other curvatures described, by the fact that its convexity is not di- rected toward the Lack of the embryo, gh zh ba Fig. 238. —Median sagittal section through the head of a Chick incubated four ant! a-half days, after MIHALKOVICS. SH, Pariet:il prominence ; s<;, lateral ventricle ; v3, third ventricle ; v\ fourth ventricle ; Sic, aqueduct of SYLVIUS; yh, vesicle of the cerebrum ; zh, between-brain ; mh, mid- brain ; kh, cerebellum ; z/, pineal process (epiphysis) ; hp, pocket of the hypophysis (pouch of RATHKE) ; ch, chorda ; ba, basilar artery. but toward its ventral side. It is formed between the floor of the * [For terminology of the regions of the brain, see footnote, p. 282.] THE ORGANS OF THE OUTER GERM- LAYER. 425 vesicle of the cerebellum and that of the after-brain, and has the form of a ridge which projects veiitrally for a considerable distance, where subsequently the transverse fibres of the pons Varolii are established. The extent of these curvatures is very different in the various classes of Vertebrates. Thus the cephalic flexure is only slightly emphasised in the lower Vertebrates (Cyclostomes, Fishes, Amphibia) ; it is, on the contrary, much greater in Reptiles, Birds, and Mammals ; but in Man especially, whose brain is the most voluminous, all of the flexures are developed to a very high degree. The five brain-vesicles furnish the foundation for a natural sub- division of the brain, whose various chief divisions can be referred back to them. As the study of the further development teaches, there are formed from the after-brain vesicle the medulla oblongata, from the vesicle of the cerebellum the vermi- form process with the hemispheres of the cere- bellum and the pons Varolii, from the mid- brain vesicle the crura cerebri and corpora quadrigeniina, from the between - brain vesicle Fig. 239.— Brain of a Rabbit embryo 16 mm. long, viewed from the left side. The outer wall of the left cerebrum is removed. After MIHALKOVICS. sn, Optic nerve ; ML, foramen of MONRO ; agf, fold of the choroid plexus ; amf, fold of the cornu Ammonia ; zh, between-brain : mh, mid-brain (cephalic or parietal flexure) ; kh, cerebellum ; Dp, roof -plate of the fourth ventricle ; bb, pontal flexure ; mo, medulla obloiigata. the between-brain [thalamencephalon] with the inf undibulum, the pineal gland, and the optic thalami, and finally from the vesicle of the cerebrum the cerebral hemispheres. Tn this metamorphosis the cavities of the primitive cerebral tube become the so-called ventricles of the brain : from the cavities of the fourth and fifth vesicles is derived the fourth ventricle or fossa rhomboidalip ; from the cavity of the mid-brain vesicle, th duct of SYLVIUS; from the between-brain, the third ventricle ; and finally from the cavities of the hemispheres, the two lateral ventricles, which are also designated as the first and second ventricles. A brief sketch will suffice to show in what manner the most important parts of the brain develop out of the five vesicular fundaments, and that at the same time histological and morphological differentiations are most intimately associated. 426 EMBRYOLOGY. Histok gically considered the wa'lls of the vesicles originally everywhere of closely crowded spindle-shaped cells, just as in the spinal cord. These cells undergo in different places unlike modifica- tions. Insomeplacestheyj^ and f urnisE "(I)" the epithelial covering of the choroid plexus in the roof of the between-brain and after-brain, (2) the ependyma lining the ventricles of the brain, and (3) follicular structures such as the epiphysis (fig. 246). On the greater part of the wall of the five brain- vesicles the cells multiply to an extraordinary extent, and are transformed into more or less extensive layers of ganglionic cells and nerve-fibres. The distribution of the gray and white substances thus formed no longer presents in the brain-vesicles the same uniform condition that it does in the spinal cord. The only uniformity is found in the fact that in every part of the brain there occur gray " nuclei," which, like the anterior and posterior gray columns of the spinal cord, are enveloped with a mantle of white substance. How- ever, there are added to the two parts of the brain that have attained the greatest development layers containing gangliouic cells, which furnish a superficial covering, the gray cortex of the cerebrum and cerebellum. By this means the white substance in certain parts of the brain becomes the core (nucleus medullaris), whereas the gray portion becomes the cortex, a condition differing in an important manner from the structure of the spinal cord. The morphological differentiation of the brain depends upon the vert/ unequal growth both of tlte five separate vesicles and of different tracts of their walls. For example, the other four vesicles remain in their development far behind that of the cerebral vesicle, in comparison with which they constitute only a small fraction of the entire mass of the brain (figs. 240, 241). They become overgrown by the cerebral vesicle from above and on the sides, and enveloped as by a mantle, so that they remain uncovered and visible only at the base of the brain. Therefore they, together with a small part of the basal portion of the cerebrum, are grouped together as the stalk of the brain, in contradistinction to the remaining chief part of the cere- brum, which constitutes the cerebral mantle. The unequal growth of the walls of the brain manifests itself in the appearance of thickened and attenuated places, in the development of special nerve-columns (pedunculi cerebri, cerebelli, etc.), and in the formation of more or less extensive layers of gangiionic cells (thalamus opticus, corpus striatum). By these means the? principle of the formation of folds, which was fully described ir che fourth THE ORGANS OF THE OUTER GERM-LAYER. 427 chapter, is shown to be carried out in a special manner on the hemispheres of the cerebrum and cerebellum inclusive of the vermiform process, — that is to say, on the two parts of the brain which are covered with a gray cortex. That the functional capacity of the cerebrum and cerebellum depends upon the extent of the gray cortex and the regularly arranged ganglionic cells in it, is to be concluded from a large number of phenomena. In this way is explained the very extensive increase of surface which is brought about in the cerebrum and cerebellum by means of somewhat different processes of folding. In the cerebrum broad ridges (gyri) arise from the medullary layer of the hemispheres (centrum semi- ovale), which, running in meandering convolutions, produce the characteristic relief of the surface (fig. 256). In the cerebellum the fig. 240.— Lateral view of the brain of a human embryo from the first half of the fifth month after MIHALKOVICS. Natural size. sit, Frontal lobe ; schei.l, parietal lobe ; hi, occipital lobe ; sckl.l, temporal lobe ; Sy.g, fissure of SYLVIUS ; rn, olfactory nerve ; kh, cerebellum ; br, pons; mob, medulla oblongata. numerous ridges proceeding from the medullary nucleus axe^narrow, arranged parallel to one another, and provided with smaller accessory (secondary and tertiary) ridges, so that the cross section of the cerebellum presents an arborescent figure (arbor vitse). If, after these preliminary remarks, we take under consideration the metamorphoses of the five vesicles, we may distinguish on each, as MIHALKOVICS has done in his monograph of the development of the brain, four regions : floor, roof, and tivo lateral parts. We shall begin our description with the fifth vesicle, because in its structure it approaches most closely to the spinal cord. (1) Metamorj)hosis of the Fifth Brain-Vesicle. The fifth brain-vesick exhibits in different Vertebrates at the beginning of development (in the Chick on the second and third 428 EMBRYOLOGY. days) faint, regular infoldings of its lateral walls, by means of which it becomes separated into several smaller parts, lying one behind the other. Inasmuch as these afterward disappear without leaving any trace, no great importance was ascribed to them by the earlier investigators (REMAK). Recently, however, several persons have maintained for them a real significance. RABL and BERANECK cmg kh Fig. 241.— Brain of a human embryo from the first half of the fifth month, divided in the median plane ; view of the median surface of the right half, after MIHALKOVICS. Natural size. rn, Olfactory nerve ; tr, infundibulum of the between-braio ; cma, commissura anterior ; ML, foramen of MONKO ; frx, fornix ; spt, septum pellucidum ; bal, corpus callosura, which below, at the genu, is continuous with the embryonic lamina terminalis ; cmg, sulcus calloso- marginalis ; fo, fissura occipitalis ; zw, cuneus ; fc, fissura calcarina ; z, epiuhysis ; vh, corpora quadrigemina ; kh, cerebellum. — msp mo Fig. 242.— Brain of a human embryo from the second half of the third month, seen from behind, after MIHALKOVICS. Natural size. msp, Longitudinal (interpallial) fissure ; vh, corpora quadrigemiua ; vma, velum medullare anterius ; kh, hemispheres of the cerebellum ; v*, fourth ventricle (fossa rhomboidalis) ; mo, medulla oblongata. recognise in them a segmentation of the brain-tube which is related to the exit of certain cranial nerves and is of importance in regard to the question of the metamerism of the entire head-region. The circumstance that the folds are so transitory appears to me to favor the older view. In the further development of the vesicle of the after-brain a distinction arises between the floor and side walls on the one hand THE ORGANS OF THE OUTER GERM-LAYER. 429 and the roof on the other. The former (figs. 241, 242) are con- siderably thickened by the addition of nervous substance and become separated on either side of the body (in Man in the third to the sixth months) into columns, which are recognisable from the outside because they are separated by grooves ; these are the extensions with certain modifications of the three familiar columns of the spinal cord. The roof of the vesicle (fig. 235 rf and fig. 243 Dp), on the contrary, produces no nerve-substance, retains its epithelial structure, becomes still thinner, and in the_adult^onsists of a single layer of flat cells. This forms the only covering to the cavity of the dorso- ventrally compressed vesicle of the after- brain — the fourth ventricle or fossa rhomboidalis. It is firmly applied to the under surface of the pia mater, and with it produces the posterior choroid plexus (tela choroidea inferior). The name choroid plexus has been chosen because the pia mater in this region becomes very vascular and in the form of two rows of branched villi grows into the cavity of the after-brain vesicle, always carrying before it, and thus infolding, the thin epithelial roof. Laterally the roof-plate or the epithelium of the choroid plexus is continuous with the parts of the brain- vesicle that have been meta- morphosed into nervous matter. The transition is effected by means of thin bands of white nervous substance, which, as obex, taenia sinus rhomboidalis, velum medullare posterius, and pedunculus flocculi, surround the edge of the fossa rhomboidalis. If with the pia mater one strips off from the medulla oblongata the posterior medullary velum, the epithelial covering of the fourth ventricle adhering to the latter will naturally be removed with it. In this way is produced the posterior brain-fissure of the older authors, through which one can penetrate into the system of cavities in the brain and spinal cord. (2) Metamorphosis of the Fourth Brain-Vesicle. The wall of the fourth brain-vesicle undergoes a considerable thick- ening in all its parts, and surrounds its cavity in the form of a ring differentiated into several regions ; the cavity becomes the anterior part of the fossa rhomboidalis (figs. 243, 242, 241). The floor furnishes the pons (bb), the cross fibres of which become evident in the fourth month. From the lateral walls arise the pedunculi cerebelli ad pontem. But it is the roof that grows to an extraordinary extent and gives to the cerebdlum its characteristic stamp. At first 430 EMBRYOLOGY. it appears as a thick transverse ridge (figs. 242, 243 kh), which over- bangs the attenuated roof of the medulla. In the third month the middle portion of the ridge acquires four deep trans- vcr.se folds )>y the sinking in of the piu nutter (fig. 242), and in this way is distinguished as the '• 243- —Brain of an embryo Calf 5 cm. long, seen from the side. The lateral wall of the hemisphere is removed. After MIHALKOVICS. Magnified 3 diameters. Corpus striatum ; ML, foramen of MONKO ; agf, fold of the choroid plexus (plexus choroideus lateralis) ; am/, fold of the cornu Ammonis ; kh, cerebellum ; Dp, roof -plate of the fourth ventricle ; 66, pontal flexure; mo, medulla oblongata; mh, mid-brain (cephalic flexure). verm (for in process from the lateral parts, which still appear smooth (kh). From this time forward the lateral parts outstrip the middle part in growth, bulge out at the sides as two hemispheres, and, ac- quiring transverse folds, in the fourth month be- the voluminous hemispheres of the cerebellum. Only a little norve-substance is developed where the roof of the fourth brain-vesicle, which has become .thickened to constitute the vermiform process and hemispheres, is continuous with the roof of the third and fifth vesicles (fig. 241). Consequently there arise here thin medullary lamellae, which serve as a transition on the one hand to the posterior choroid plexus, and on the other to the lamina quadrigemina (vh) — the posterior and the anterior velum medullare. (3) Metamorphosis of the Third or Mid-brain Vesicle. (Figs. 235, 243, 242, 241.) The mid-brain vesicle is the most conservative portion of the embry- onic neural tube, the part which is changed least of all ; in Man a small portion only of the- brain is derived from it. Its walls become rather uniformly thickened on all sides of the cavity, which is narrow and becomes the aqueduct of SYLVIUS. The base and lateral walls together supply the crura cerebri and substantia perforata posterior, The roof -plate (fig. 242 vh) becomes the corpora quadrigemina, owing to the appearance, in the third month, of a median furrow, and, in the fifth month, of a transverse one crossing it at right angle5?. THE ORGANS OF THE OUTER GERM-LAYER. 431 Whereas at the beginning of the development the mid-brain vesicle (figs. 235, 243 mh), as a consequence of the curvature of the neural tube, occupies the highest position and produces the parietal jn*ominence of the head (fig. 158 s), it is afterwards covered in from above by the other parts of the brain, which are becoming more voluminous, — the cerebellum and cerebrum, — and is crowded down to the base of the brain (compare fig. 235 mh with fig. 241 vh). (4) Metamorphosis of the Second or Between-brain Vesicle. The betiveen-brain vesicle also remains small, but undergoes a series of interesting changes, since, apart from the optic vesicles, which grow out from its walls, two other appendages, of proble- matical meaning, are developed from it — the pineal gland and the hypophysis. In the case of the between-brain vesicle, it is only in the lateral walls that a considerable amount of nerve-substance is formed. By this means the walls thicken into the optic thalami with their ganglioiiic layers. Between them the cavity of the vesicle is retained as a narrow vertical fissure, known as the third ventricle ; it is united with the fossa rhomboidalis by means of the aqueduct of SYLVIUS. The floor remains thin and at an early period becomes evaginated downwards ; it thus acquires the form (figs. 235, 241 tr) of a short funnel (mfundibulum)^with the apex of which is united the hypophysis, soon to be fully described. V-^ 3-°\ The roof presents in its metamorphosis a striking similarity to the corresponding part of the after -brain vesicle (fig. 241). It persists as a simple, thin epithelial layer, unites with the very vascular pia mater, — which sends out in this case also villous outgrowths with capillary loops which pass into the third ventricle, — and together with it constitutes the anterior choroid plexus (tela choroidea anterior or superior}. When in withdrawing the pia mater the choroid plexus is also removed, the third ventricle is opened ; thus is produced the anterior great fissure of the brain through which, as through the structure of the same name in the medulla oblongata, one can penetrate into the cavities of the brain. The agreement with the medulla oblongata is expressed in still another point. As in the case of the latter the edges of the roof- plate develop into thin medullary bands, by means of which the attachment to the sides of the fossa rhomboidalis is accomplished, so 432 EMBRYOLOGY. here also the epithelium of the choroid plexus attaches itself to the surface of the optic thalamus by means of thin bands consisting of medullated nerve-fibres (tseniae thalami optici). Finally, out of the hinderinost portion of th<» roof of the between- brain vesicle a peculiar organ, the pineal yland (fig. 241 z), takes its origin at a very early period, in Man in the course of the second month. Since in recent years numerous interesting works have appeared concerning it, and since many striking discoveries have been brought to light both in the case of the Selachians and more especially in that of the Reptiles, I will describe it at some- what greater length. The Development of the Pineal Gland (Epiphysis cerebri). First it is to be mentioned that, with the exception of Amphioxus lanceolatus, the pineal gland (glandula pinealis s. conarium) is not wanting in any Vertebrate. It is in all cases formed in exactly the same way. On the roof of the between-brain, where it is continuous with the roof of the mid-brain or the lamina quad ri gemma, there arises an evagination (figs. 238 and 241 z) which has the shape of the finger of a glove, the processu^ pinealis \epiphysis cerebri], the apex of which is at first directed forward, but subsequently backward. In its further metamorphosis there appear, as far as our knowledge at present extends, differences of considerable importance. According to the investigations of EHLERS, the pineal process attains in adult Selachians an unusual length ; its closed end swells into a vesicle, which penetrates the cranial capsule and extends out to the dermal surface. In many Selachians, such as Acanthias and Raja, the vesicular end is enclosed in a canal of the cranial capsule itself ; in others it lies outside between the cranial capsule and the corium. The [proximal] end of the vesicle is united to the between- brain by means of a long slender canal. Manifold conditions are met with in Reptiles, as the recent investi- gations of SPENCER have taught. These conditions permit in part a direct comparison with the Selachians, but in part they are widely altered. Here, too, the pineal gland is a structure of considerable length, the peripheral end of which lies far away from the between- brain under the epidermis ; it passes out through an opening in the roof of the skull which is situated in the parietal bone and is known MS thf foramen ixmeMdt. The position of the latter can easily be determined on the head of the living animal, because at this place THE ORGANS OF THE OUTER GERM-LAYER. 432 the dermal scutes acquire a special condition and form, and, above all are transparent. In regard to the particular form of the organ, there are essential!} three types to be distinguished. In many Reptiles, e.g., in Platydactylus, the pineal gland has the same structure as in Sharks : a small peripheral vesicle, which is schb p st bl x sh Fig. 244.— Diagrammatic longitudinal section through the brain ofChameleo vulgaris with the pineal organ, which is separated into three portions, a vesicular, a cord-like, and a tube-like portion, after BALDWIN SPENCER. schb, Parietal bone with the foramen parietale ; p, pigment of the integument ; st, cord-like middle portion of the epiphysis ; bl, its vesicular terminal portior* : x, transparent region of the integument ; grh, cerebrum ; sh, optic thalamus ; v3, third ventricle, which is continued \ipwards into the tube- like initial portion (^4) of the epiphysis. enclosed in the parietal foramen, is lined with ciliated cylindrical cells, and is connected with the roof of the between-brain by means of a long, hollow stalk. In other Reptiles, as in the Chameleon, the organ is differentiated into three portions (fig. 244): first into a small closed vesicle (bl), which lies under a transparent scale (x) in the foramen parietale and IB lined with ciliated epithelium ; secondly into a solid cord 28 434 EMBRYOLOGY. (st), which consists of fibres and spindle-shaped cells, and bears a certain resemblance to the embryonic optic nerve ; and thirdly into a hollow, funnel-shaped projection (A) of the roof of the between - brain, which still exhibits here and there sac-like enlargements. In a third >(,T1,|ljr,.»i •,,,,< division of the Hep tiles, in Hatteria, Monitor, the Blind-w o r m s, and Lizards, the vesicular distal portion of the pineal gland under- goes a striking metamorpbo- sis, by means of which it ac- quires a certain resemblance to the eye of many In vertebra t c s (fig. 245). The portion of its wall which lies next to the sur- face of the body has been trans- formed into a lens-like struc- ture (I) ; the part of the wall lying opposite the latter and continuous with the fibrous cord (St) has, on the contrary, been converted into a retina-like structure (r). The formation of the lens (I) is due to the fact that the epithelial cells of the anterior wall of the vesicle have become elongated into cylindrical cells and uninucleate fibres, and have thereby produced an elevation, the convex surface of which st Fig. 245. — Longitudinal vertical section through the pineal eye of Hatteria punctata and its connective-tissue capsule, after BALDWIN SPENCER. Slightly enlarged. The anterior part of the capsule fills up the parietal foramen. K, Connective-tissue capsule ; I, lens ; h, cavity of the eye filled with fluid ; r, retina-like portion of the optic vesicle ; M, molecular layer of the retina ; g, blood-vessels ; x, cells in the stalk of the pineal eye ; St, stalk of the pineal eye, comparable with the optic nerve. THE ORGANS OF THE OUTER GERM-LAYER. 435 projects into the cavity of the vesicle. In the posterior portion the epithelial cells are separated into different layers, the innermost of which is distinguished by the abundance of its pigment. Between the pigmented cells there are imbedded others, which can be compared to the rods of the visual cells in the paired eyes of Vertebrates, and which appear to be in connection below with nerve- fibres. Those investigators who, like RABL-RUCKHARD, AHLBORN, SPENCER, and others, have studied the pineal gland, are of opinion that the pineal body must be considered as an impaired parietal eye, which in many classes, for example in Reptiles, appears to be tolerably well preserved, but in most Vertebrates is in ^process of degeneration. That we have to do in Reptiles with an organ which reacts under the influence of light, does not appear improbable, when one takes into consideration that, owing to the transparency of the dermal scutes at the place in the skull where the parietal foramen is located, rays of light are here able to penetrate through the integu- ment. The presence of a lens-like body and pigment is also favorable to this view. But whether the organ serves for sight, or only for the transmission of sensations of warmth, — whether, consequently, it is more an organ for the perception of warmth than an eye, — must for the present remain undecided. It is still more an open question whether this organ of warmth is a structure which has been developed as a special modification of the epiphysis of Reptiles alone, — as the auditory sac, for example, has been developed in the tail of the Crustacean Mysis, — or whether it represents a structure originally common to all Vertebrates. In the latter case processes of degeneration must be assumed to be wide- spread:, for up to the present time nothing like the condition in Reptiles has been found in other Vertebrates. In Birds and Mammals the pineal process undergoes metamor- phoses which give rise to an organ of a glandular, follicular structure. In Birds (fig. 246) it never attains such great length as in Selachians and Reptiles. At a certain stage it sends out from its surface into the surrounding vascular connective tissue cellular out- growths, which increase in number by means of budding and finally break up into numerous small follicles (fig. 246 f ). These consist of several layers of cells, the outermost being small, spherical elements, the innermost cylindrical ciliated cells. The proximal portion of the pineal process does not become involved in the follicular metamor- phosis and persists as a funnel-shaped outfoldiug of the roof of the between-brain ; the individual follicular vesicles constricted off from 436 EMBRYOLOGY. the parental tissue are united with its upper end by means of connective tissue. In Mammals the development takes place in a manner similar to that of the Chick. In the Rabbit there also arise follicles^ each of which at first encloses a small cavity, but later becomes solid. They are then entirely filled with spherical cells, which possess a certain resemblance to lymph- corpuscles. The opinion has therefore been expressed by many (HENLE) that the pineal body is a lymphoid organ, an opinion, however, which is refuted by the study of the development, for genetically the follicles are ex- clusively epithelial structures. In the adult there are formed within the individual follicles concretions, the brain-sand (acervulus cerebri). In Man the pineal body, which begins to appear in the sixth week (His), exhibits a peculiarity as regards its position. Whereas the free end of the epiphysis is at first directed forward, and in other Vertebrates is also retained in this position, it acquires in Man an opposite direction, inasmuch as it bends backward on to the surfaced the lamina quadrigemina. Probably this is connected with the fact that the gland is crowded back by the excessive development of the- corpus callosum. As the signification of the pineal gland is still doubtful, so is that of the pituitary body or hypophysis cerebri, which, as has been previously mentioned, is united with the floor of the between-brain at the apex of the infundibular process. Fig. 246.— Section through the pineal gland of a Turkey, after MIHALKOVICS. Mag- nified ISO diameters. /, Follicle of the pineal gland with its cavities ; 6, connective tissue with blood-vessels. The Development of the Hypophysis (Pituitary Body). Tlie hypophysis is an organ which has a double origin. This is expressed in its entire structure, since it is composed of a larger, anterior and a smaller, posterior lobe, which in their histological characters are fundamentally different from each other. In order to observe the beginning of its formation, it is necessary to go back to a very early stage (fig. 237), in which the oral sinus THE ORGANS OF THE OUTER GERM-LAYER. 437 has just arisen and is still separated from the cavity of the head-gut by means of the pharyngeal membrane (rh). At this time the cephalic flexure of the brain- vesicles has already appeared, and the anterior end of the chorda dorsalis (ch) terminates immediately behind the attachment of the pharyngeal membrane. In front of this is located the important place where the hypophysis is developed, as was first established by GOETTE and MIHALKOVICS. The hypo- physis is therefore a product of the outer germ-layer and not a growth from the cavity of the head-gut, as had always been maintained previous to this time. The first steps introductory to the formation of the hypophysis take place soon after the rupture of the pharyngeal membrane (figs. 238, 247), some unimportant remnants of which are retained at the base of the skull as the so-called primitive velum palatinum. Anterior to these there is now developed (in the Chick on the fourth day of incubation, in Man during the fourth week, His) a small evagination, the pouch of RATHKE or the pocket of the hypophysis which grows to- ward the base of the b e t w e e n-b rain (tr). Then it becomes deeper, begins to be constricted tr off from its parent tissue, and to be metamor- phosed into a small sac, whose wall is composed of several layers of cylin- drical cells (fig. 248). The sac of the hypo- physis (hy} remains for a long time in connec- tion with the oral cavity by means of a narrow duct (hyg). In later stages, however, the connection in the higher Vertebrates is interrupted, because the embryonic connective tissue, which supplies the foundation for the development of the skeleton of the head. becomes thickened and crowds the sac farther away from the oral cavity (figs. 248, 249). When, later on, the process of chondrification nl Fig. 247.— Median sagittal section through the hypophysis of a Rabbit embryo 12 mm. long, after MIHALKOVICS. Magnified 50 diameters. tr, Floor of the between-brain with the infundibulum ; nh, floor of the after-brain ; ch, chorda ; hy, pocket of the hypophysis. 438 EMBRYOLOGY. takes place in the connective tissue, by means of which the carti- laginous base of the skull (schb) is established, the sac of the hypo- physis (hy) comes to lie above the latter at the under surface of the be- tween-brain (tr). At this time also the duct of the schb hyg sckb Fig. 248.— Sagittal section through the hypophysis of a Rabbit embryo 20 mm. long, after MIHALKOVICS. Magnified 55 diameters. tr, Floor of the between-brain with infundibulum ; hy, hypophysis ; hy1, part of the hypophysis in which the formation of the glandular tubules begins; hyg, duct of the hypophysis; schb, base of the skull ; ch, chorda; si, dorsum sellse. which meanwhile has lost its lumen, begins to shrivel and degenerate (tig! 249). In many Vertebrates, however, as in the Selachians, it is retained throughout life and forms a hollow -canal, which perfo- rates the carti- laginous base of the skull and is united with the epithelium of the mucous membrane of the mouth. In extremely rare cases there is retained in Man also a canal in the basi-sphenoid, which leads ~ ch schb Fig. 249.— Sagittal section through the hypophysis of a Rabbit embryo 30 mm. long, after MIHALKOVICS. Magnified 40 diameters. tr, Floor of the between-brain with infundibulum ; hy, original pouch- like part of the hypophysis ; hy1, the glandular tubules which have budded out from the sac of the hypophysis; si, dorsum sellae; ba, basilar artery; ch, chorda ; schb, cartilaginous base of the skull; em, epithelium of oral cavity. from the sella turcica to the base of the skull and receives a prolongation of the hypophysis (SUCHANNEK). THE ORGANS OF THE OUTER GERM-LAYER. 439 At an early period an evagination from the between-brain . 247, 249), called the infundibulum (tr), has grown out toward the sac of the hypophysis and applied itself to the posterior wall of the latter, which it has folded in toward the anterior or opposite wall. This first stage is followed by a second, in which the sac and the adjoining end of the infundibulum are metamorphosed into the two lobes of the complete organ already mentioned. The sac begins (in Man in the second half of the second month, His) to send out from its surface into the surrounding very vascular connective tissue hollow tubules (the tubules of the hypophysis} (figs. 248, 249 %'). These are then detached from the walls of the sac, by becoming enclosed on all sides by vascular connective tissue. In this respect the process of development agrees in the main with that of the thyroid gland, only that the spherical follicles are here represented by tubular structures. After the entire sac has been resolved into a large number of small, tortuous tubules provided with narrow lumina, the lobe thus produced applies itself closely to the lower end of the infundibulum, with which it becomes united by means of connective tissue. The end of the infundibulum itself is transformed in the lower- Vertebrates into a small lobe of the brain, in which, moreover, ganglionic cells and nerve-fibres can be identified. In the higher Vertebrates, on the contrary, no trace of such histological elements can be detected in the posterior lobe of the hypophysis, which in these forms consists of closely packed spindle-cells, and thus acquiras a close resemblance to a spindle-cell sarcoma. (5) Development of the First or Fore-Brain Vesicle. The most important changes, the comprehension of which is in part attended with serious difficulties, take place in the vesicle of the fore-brain or cerebrum. It is divided (fig. 250), even at the time of its formation, as has already been mentioned, into a risrht and a left portion, owing to the fact that its wall becomes infolded from in front and from above by means of a vertical process of the connective- tissue envelope of the brain, the primitive falx. The two portions, the vesicles of the hemispheres (hms), come close together, being separated by only the narrow longitudinal or interpallial fissure (msp), which is filled up by the falx, so that their median surfaces become mutually flattened, whereas their lateral and under surfaces are 440 EMBRYOLOGY. convex. Where the plane and convex surfaces are continuous with each other there is a sharp bend in the mantle (Mantelkante). The vesicles of the hemispheres at first have thin walls formed of several layers of spindle- shaped cells (fig. 251, i) and each encloses a large cavity, the lateral ventricle (fig. 251), which is derived from the central canal of the neural tube. Inasmuch as these have been reckoned by the earlier authors as the first and second ventricles, it is plain why the cavities of the between-brain and medulla oblongata are respectively designated as the third and fourth ventricles. In Man, during the earlier months, each lateral ventricle is in communication with the third ventricle by means of a wide opening, the primitive foramen of MOXRO (figs. 239 ML and 254 m). Fig. 250.— Brain of a human embryo seven weeks old, parietal (Scheitel) aspect, after MIHALKOVICS. msp, Interpallial (longi- tudinal) fissure, at the bottom of which is seen the embryonic lamina terminalis (Schluss- platte) ; Jims, left hemi- sphere ; zh, between- brain ; mh, mid-brain ; hh, hind - brain and after-brain. Anterior to the foramen of MONEO lies the part of the wall of the cerebrum which was infolded by the development of the great interpallial fissure : on the one hand it effects the anterior union of the walls of the two hemispheres ; on the other it bounds the third ventricle in front, and is therefore called the anterior closing plate (lamina terminalis). It is continuous below with the anterior wall ^ 2, of tbe infundibulum of the between-brain. In the further develop- ment of each vesicle of the hemispheres four processes are intimately associated : ( 1 ) an extraordinary growth and an enlargement in all directions resulting from it ; (2) an infolding of the wall of the vesicle, so that externally there arise deep clefts (the fissures), and internally projections into the lateral ventricles; (3) the development of a system of commissures, by means of which the right and left hemispheres are brought into closer union (corpus callosum and fornix); (4) the formation of Fig. 251. — Brain of a human embryo of three months, after KOLLIKER. Natural size. 1. From above with the hemispheres removed and the mid-brain opened. 2. The same from below. /, Anterior part of the marginal arch (Randbogen) of the cerebrum cut through ; /', posterior part (hippocampus) of the marginal arch ; tko, optic thalamus ; cst, corpus striatum ; to, tractus opticus ; CHI, corpora mammillaria ; p, pons Varolii. THE ORGANS OF THE OUTER GERM-LAYEK. 441 furrows that cut into the cort:x of the cerebrum more or less deeply from the outside, but cause no corresponding internal projections in the wall of the ventricle. As regards its general features, the embryonic growth of the cerebral vesicles is especially characterised by an enlargement backward. In the third month the posterior lobe already completely overlies the optic thalamus (fig. 242) ; in the fifth month it begins to extend over the corpora quadrigemina (fig. 241), which it entirely covers up in the sixth month. From there it spreads over the cerebellum (fig. 256). The cerebrum is not characterised in all Mammals by such an extraordinary growth as in Man; comparative anatomy teaches rather that the stages of development of the human brain in different months here described, are met with in other Mammals as permanent conditions. In some animals the posterior margins of fie hemispheres extend as far as the corpora quadrigemina ; in others they cover these more or less completely ; in others, finally, they have grown over the cerebellum more or less. On the whole, the increase in the volume of the cerebrum, which is so varied in Mammals, goes hand in hand with an increase in intelligence. The vesicles of the hemispheres undergo additional complication (in Man in the course of the second and third months), owing to infoldings of their thin walls, which still enclose a large cavity. As a result of this there arise on the outer surface deep furrows, which separate large areas from one another and which have been designated as total furrows or fissures by His, who has rightly estimated their importance in the architecture of the brain. Corresponding to the furrows which are visible on the outer surface, there are more or less prominent elevations on the inner surface of the lateral ventricles, by means of which the latter become narrowed and reduced in size. The total furrows of the cerebral hemispheres are the fissure of SYLVIUS (fossa Sylvii), the arcuate fissure, embracing the hippo- campal fissure (fissura hippocampi), the fissura choroidea, the fissura calcarina, and the fissura parieto-occipitalis. The elevations produced by them are called the corpus striatum, fornix and pes hippocampi, tela choroidea and calcar avis. A prominence which in the embryo corresponds to the fissura parieto-occipitalis, becomes obliterated in the adult by a considerable thickening of the wall of the brain, so that no permanent structure results from it. The fissure of SYLVIUS (fig. 252 Sy.g} is the first one formed. It appears as a shallow depression of the con rex outer surface at about 442 EMBRYOLOGY. the middle of the lower margin of each hemisphere. The part ot the wall which is thus depressed becomes considerably thickened (figs. 243, 251 cs£, and 254 st), and forms an elevation on the floor of the cerebrum projecting into its cavity, the corpus striatum, in which several nuclei of gray matter are developed (the nucleus caudatus, the nucleus lentiformis, and the claustrum). Inasmuch as the elevation lies at the base of the brain and forms the direct forward and lateral continuation of the optic thalamus, it is regarded as belonging to the brain-stalk, and is distinguished as the stalk part of the cerebral hemispheres in distinction from the remaining portion or mantle part. The outer surface of the stalk part can bo seen from the outside for a time, — as long as the Sylvian fissure is still shallow (fig. 252 Sy.g), echei.l mob Fig. 252. — Lateral view of the brain of a human embryo during the first half of the fifth month, after MIHALKOVICS. Natural size. stl, Frontal lobe ; schei.l, parietal lobe ; hi, occipital lobe ; scld.l. temporal lobe; Sy.g, fissure of SYLVIUS ; ?•«, olfactory nerve ; kh, cerebellum ; br, por.s ; mob, medulla oblongata. — but it then becomes entirely overgrown and hidden by the edges of the gradually deepening fissure. Later this surface acquires in the embryo several cortical furrows and becomes the island of REIL (insula Reilii), or the central lobe (Stammlappen). The mantle portion, as it enlarges, spreads out uniformly around the island of REIL, as though about a fixed point, and surrounds it in the form of a half -ring open below (fig. 252) ; on this account it nas received the name ring-lobe. Even now the regions of the four chief lobes into which the convex surface of each hemisphere is subsequently divided can readily be distinguished, although they are not yet sharply limited. The end of the half -ring which is directed forward and lies above the fissure of SYLVIUS (Sy.g} is the frontal lobe (stl) ; the opposite end, which embraces the fissure behind and THE ORGANS OF THE OUTER GERM-LAYER. 443 below, is the temporal lobe (schl.l) ; the region lying above and connecting the two is the parietal lobe (schei.l). A prominence which is developed from the ring-lobe backward becomes the occipital lobe (hi}. The lateral ventricle has also become altered and corresponds to the external form of each hemisphere (fig. 253). It also assumes the shape of a half -ring, which lies above and surrounds the corpus striatum (cst) — that part of the wall of the vesicle which is forced inward by the fissure of SYLVIUS. Subsequently, when the individual lobes of the hemispheres are more sharply differentiated from one another, the lateral ventricle also undergoes a subdivision correspond- ing to the lobes. It becomes slightly enlarged at both ends, in front into the anterior cornu occupying the frontal lobe, behind and below into the inferior cornu of the temporal lobe. Finally, from the half- ring there is developed a small evagination, the posterior cornu, which extends backward into the occipital lobe. The region lying between the horns is narrowed and becomes the cella media. All the fissures hitherto mentioned, except that of SYLVIUS, are developed on the plane [median] surface of the vesicle of the hemisphere. At a very early stage — in Man in the fifth week (His) — there arise on this wall of the hemisphere two furrows running almost parallel with the edge or bend of the mantle, the arcuate or hippocampal fissure and the fissure of the choroid plexus (Jissura hippocampi, and Jissura choroidea) ; both conform very closely in their direction to the ring- lobe, and, like it, with crescentic form embrace from above the stalk part of the cerebrum, the corpus striatum. They begin at the foramen of MONRO and extend from there to the tip of the temporal lobe, forming the boundaries of a region known as the marginal arch (Randbogen) ; this projects as a thickening on the median surface of the hemisphere, and takes part in the development of the commissural system. The invaginations of the median wall of the ventricle, caused by the fissures, the hippocampal fold and infold of the lateral choroid plexus, are best understood by removing in an embryo the lateral wall of the hemisphere, so that one can survey the inner surface of the median wall of the still very spacious and ring-like lateral ventricle (fig. 253). The cavity is then seen to be partly filled with a reddish frilled fold (agf], which lies in the form of a crescent on the upper surf ace of the corpus striatum (csi). In the region of the fold the wall of the brain undergoes changes similar to those in the roof of the medulla oblongata and of the vesicle of the between-brain 444 EMBRYOLOGY- (figs. 254 pi and 255 atf). Instead of thickening and developing nerve-substance, it becomes attenuated, and is trans- formed into a single layer of flat epithelial cells, which are firmly united with the pia mater. The latter then becomes very vascular along the entire fold, and grows into the lateral ventricle in the form of tufts, which carry the epithelium before them. In this way the lateral choroid plexus aris; s (fig. 254 pi), which afterwards, in the adult, fills a. part of the cella media and in- ferior cornu. It begins at the foramen of MONIIO (fig. 253 Jf/^where it is continuous with the an- Fig. 253. - -Lateral view of the brain of an embryo Calf 5 cm, long. The lateral wall of the hemisphere has been removed. After MIHALKOVICS. Magni- fied 3 diameters. cst, Corpus striatum ; ML, foramen of MONRO ; agf, plexus choroideus lateralis ; am/, hippocampal fold ; kh, cerebellum ; Dp, roof of the fourth ventricle ; bb, pontal flexure ; mo, medulla ob- longata ; mh, mid-brain (parietal flexure). '(/ terior unpaired choroid plexus which has arisen in the roof of the be- tween-brain vesicle. If the delicate vas- cular pia mater is drawn out from the cho- roid fissure, the wall of the brain, which is reduced to a Fig. 254.— Transverse section through the brain of an embryo Sheep 2-7 cm. in length, after KOLLIKEK. The section passes through the region of the foramen of MONRO. st, Corpus striatum; in, foramen of MOXRO ; t, third ventricle; pi, plexus choroideus of the lateral ventricle ;/, f alx cerebri ; th, deepest anterior part of the optic thalamus; ch, chiasma ; o, optic nerve ; c, fibres of the crus cerebri; h, hippocampal fold ; p, pharynx; sa, picsphenoid ; a, orbito-sphenoid ; s, part of the roof of the brain at the junction of the roof of the third ventricle with the lamii:a terminalis ; I, lateral ventricle. thin epithe- lium, is at the same time destroyed, and there is produced in the median wall of the hemisphere a gaping fissure, which extends from THE ORGANS OF THE OUTER GERM-LAYER. 445 nf the foramen of MONRO to the tip of the temporal lobe and leads from the outside into the lateral ventricle. This is the lateral cerebral fis- sure, or the great fissure of the hemispheres (fissura cerebri transversa). In a preparation made in the manner described the hippocampal, fold is to be seen at a short distance from the choroid plexus and _ parallel to it (tigs. 253 and 255 «w/and tig. 254 h). This increase.-. in size toward the apex of the inferior cornu, and in the completely formed brain produces 'the cornu Ammonis or pes hippocampi Consequently that part of the lateral ventricle enclosed in the tem- poral lobe becomes (as the result of two infoldings of its median wall) restricted by two pro- jections, the choroid plexus and the cornu Ammonis. As in the between- brain and me- dulla o b 1 o n- gata, the epi- thelial covering of the choroid plexus is con- tinuous with the thicker nerve-sub- stance of the cornu A m- monis. The transition is effected by means of a thin medullary plate^ which in anatomy is described as the fimbria. Inasmuch as the occipital lobe with its cavity develops as an evagination of the ring- lobe, the fissura calcarina belonging to it is therefore developed somewhat later than the arcuate fissure (fig. 241 /c). It appears at the end of the third month as a fissure branching off from the latter, and runs in a horizontal direction until near the apex of the occipital lobe. It invaginates the median wall of the lobe and £ro^uc£sjea/caws? which invades the posterior c/t Fig. 255.— Transverse section through the brain of a Rabbit embryo 3-8 cm. in length, after MIHALKOVICS. Magnified 9 diameters. The section passes through the foramina of MONRO. hs, Great falx cerebri which fills up the interpallial fissure ; Jt\ h", plane inner [median] and convex outer wall of the cerebral hemisphere ; agf, fold of the choroid plexus ; am/, hippocampal fold ; /, fornix ; sv, lateral ventricle ; ML, foramen of MONKO ; -y3, third ventricle ; ch, optic chiasma ; frtf, descending root of the fornix. cornu in the same way as the hippocampus major (cornu Ammonis) does the inferior cornu. At the beginning of the fourth month the fissura occipitalis (fig/ 241 fo) is added to it. The latter rises from 446 EMBRYOLOGY. the anterior end of the fissura calcarina in a vertical direction to the bent rim of the mantle (Mantelkante), and sharply separates the occipital and parietal lobes from each other. A third factor of great importance in the development of the cerebrum is the formation of a system of commissures^ which sup- plements the connection of the two cerebral vesicles, at first effected by the embryonic lamina terminalis only. Those investigators who have occupied themselves with these difficult matters assert that in the third embryonic month fusions take place between the facing median walls of the hemispheres. These fusions begin in front of the foramen of MONRO within a triangular area. The fusions in this region occur only at the periphery, not in the middle of the area. Three parts of the brain of the adult are thus produced : in front, the genii of the corpus callosum, behind, the columns of the fornix, and between them, the septum pellucidum ; the latter contains a fissure- like cavity, in the region of which the contiguous walls of the hemi- spheres, here very much attenuated, have remained separated from each other. Consequently the cavity just mentioned — the ventriculus septi pellucidi [or fifth ventricle] — ought not to be placed in the same category with the other cavities of the brain ; for while the latter are derived from the central canal of the embryonic neural tube, the former is a new production, which has arisen by the enclosure of a portion of the space lying outside the brain between the two hemi- spheres— the narrow interpallial fissure. A further enlargement of the commissural system is accomplished in the fifth and sixth months. The fusion now proceeds still farther, advancing from in front backwards, and involves that region of the median walls of the hemispheres which, situated between the arcuate fissure [above] and the fissure 'of the choroid plexus [below], has already been described as the marginal arch (Randbogen). By fusion of the anterior part of the marginal arch with its fellow of the opposite side, — which process takes place as far as the posterior limit of the bet ween -brain, — there arise the body of the corpus callosum and the spleniuin, as well as the underlying fornix. The furrow bounding the corpus callosum above (sulcus corporis callosi) is there- fore the anterior part of the arcuate furrow, whereas the posterior portion, that of the temporal lobe, is subsequently known as the fissura hippocampi. The structure of the cerebrum is completed by the appearance of numerous cortical furrows. These differ in rank from the total furrows already described, because they are confined to the outer surface of the THE ORGANS OF THE OUTER GERM-LAYER. 447 brain and do not cause corresponding projections into the ventricles. Their formation begins as soon as the wall of the brain becomes greatly increased in thickness by the development of white medullary substance, which occurs during and after the fifth month. This is due to the fact that the gray cortex with its ganglionic cells increases more rapidly in superficial extent than the white substance and is therefore raised into folds, the cerebral convolutions or gyri, into which only thin processes of white substance penetrate. At first, therefore, the furrows are quite shallow; they become deeper in proportion as the hemispheres become thicker and the cortical folds project farther out- ward. Of the numerous fur- rows which the completely formed brain presents, some appear during the develop- ment earlier, others later. Thus they acquire different values in the architecture of the cerebral surface. For " the earlier a furrow appears the deeper it comes, the later it pears the shallower it (PANSCH). The first therefore the more impor- tant and constant ones, and are fittingly to be distin- guished as chief or primary furrows from the subse- quently formed and more variable secondary and tertiary furrows. They begin to appear at the commencement of the sixth month. The first of them to appear is the central furrow (fig. 256 cf), which is one of the most important, since it separates the frontal and parietal lobes from each other. " In the ninth month all of the chief sulci and convolutions are formed, and since at this time the secondary sulci are still wanting, the brain during the ninth month presents a typical illustration of the sulci and convolutions " (MIHALKOVICS). Very great differences exist between the different divisions of Mammals in the extent to which the sulci of the cerebrum are developed. Oil the one hand are the Monotremes, Insectivores, and many Kodents, whose cerebrum — also le- ap- is" are Fig. 256.— Brain of a human embryo at the beginning of the eighth m«nth, after MIHALKOVICS. Three- fourths natural size. c/, Central furrow ; vcw, hew, anterior and posterior central convolutions ; fo, fissura occipitalis. 448 EMBRYOLOGY. usually less developed in other features — possesses a smooth surface, and thus, as it were, remains permanently in the foetal condition of the human brain. On the other hand the brains of the Carnivores and Primates, owing to the great number of their convolutions, approach more closely to the human brain. Finally, in treating of the development of the cerebrum there is still to be considered an appendage to it, the olj actor it nerve. This part, as well as the optic nerve, is distinguished from the peripheral nerves by its entire development, and must be considered as _a_ specially modified portion of the cerebral vesicle. The older de- --- Lol signation of nerve is therefore now more frequently replaced by the more appropriate name of olfactory lobe, (lobus olfactorins, rhinencephalon). Even at an early stage — in the Chick on the seventh day of incubation, in Man during the fifth week (His) — there is formed on the floor of each frontal lobe at its anterior end a small evagination, which is directed forward (figs. 240, 241 rn). This gradually assumes the form of a dub, the enlarged end of which, the part lying on the cribriform plate of the ethmoid bone, is designated as tiie Indbus olfaetorius. The bul- bus encloses a cavity which is in communication with the lateral ventricle. During the first month of development the olfaciory lobe, even in Man, is relatively large and provided with a central cavity. Later it begins to diminish somewhat, the sense of smell being only slightly developed in Man , its growth is arrested and "at the same time its cavity also disappears. In most Mammals,, on the contrary, — whose sense of smell, as is well known, is more acute than that of Man, — the olfactory lobe attains a greater size in the adult animal and exhibits more clearly the character of a part of the brain, for it permanently encloses in its bulb a cavity, which Fig. 257. — Brain of Galeus canis in situ, dorsal aspect, after EOHON. Lol, Lobus olfactorius ; Tro, tractus nervi olf actor ii ; VH, fore-brain, provided at fn with a vascular foramen (foramen nutritium); ZH, between -brain ; MH, mid-brain ; HH, hind-brain ; NB, after- brain ; B, spinal cord ; //, n. options ; III, n. oculomotorius ; IV, n. trochlearis ; V, n. trigeminus ; L, Trig, lobus trigemini ; C,rest, corpus resfciforme; IX, glosso- pharyngeus ; X, vagus; E,t, eminentiae teretes. THE ORGANS OF THE OUTER GERM-LAYER. 449 frequently (Horse) is even in connection with the anterior cornu by means of a narrow canal in the tractus olfactorius. The olfactory lobe (Lol -\-Tro) attains an extraordinary develop- ment (fig. 257) in the Selachia, in which it, exceeds in size the hetween-brain (ZH) and mid-brain (MH\ In the Selachians two long hollow processes (tractus olfactorius, Tro] extend out from the anterior end of the little-developed cerebrum and terminate at a considerable distance from the fore-brain in two large hollow- lobes, that are sometimes provided with furrows (Lol). B. The Development of the Peripheral Nervous System. Although it is easy to follow the development of the brain and spinal cord, the investigation of the origin of the peripheral nervous system is very difficult, for it requires the study of histological processes of the most subtle nature — the first appearance of non-niedullated nerve -fibres and the method of their termination in embryos composed of more or less undifferentiated cells. One who knows how difficult it is even in the adult animal to follow non-medullated nerve-fibrillae in epithelial layers or in non-striate muscle-tissue, and to get a clear idea of their method of termination, will understand that many, and indeed the most interesting, questions in regard to the development of the peripheral nerves are not yet ripe for discussion, because the observations necessary for their settlement are still wanting. There is only one point which is entirely clear. That concerns the development of the spinal ganglia, which His and BALFOUR independently of each other were the first to recognise, the one in the Chick, the other in Selachians. Since then numerous investigations embracing different groups of Vertebrates have been published on this subject by HENSEN, MILNES MARSHALL, KOLLIKER, SAGEMEHL, VAN WIJHE, BEDOT, OSODI, BERANECK, EABL, BEARD, KASTSCHENKO, and others. (a) The Development of the Spinal Ganglia. The development of the spinal ganglia in the spinal cord is very easily followed. It begins just at the time the medullary groove closes to form a tube (fig. 258 A and B). At this time a thin ridge of cells (spy', spg) one or two layers deep grows out of the neural tube on either side of the line of fusion, and, passing outward 29 450 EMBRYOLOGY. and downward, inserts itself between the tube and the closely investing primitive epidermis. In this way it reaches the dorsal angle of the primitive somites (us), which are by this time well developed. Then the neural crest, as BAL- FOUR names it, or the ganglionic ridge, as SAGEMEHL calls it, is divided up into successive Tig. 258. — A, Cross section through an embryo of Pristiurus, after RABL. "1 he primitive segments are still connected with the remaining portion of the middle germ-layer. At the region of tran- sition there is to be seen an outfolding, sk, from which the skeletogenous tissue is developed, ch, Chorea ; spg, spinal ^ganglion ; mp, muscle-plate of the primitive segment ; sch, subchordal rod ; ao, aorta ; ik, inner germ-layer ; pmb, parietal, vmb, visceral middle layer. B, Dross section through a Lizard embryo, after SAGEMEHI.. tin, Spinal cord ; sj)gt lower thickened part of the neural ridge ; spg", its upper attenuated part, which is continuous with the roof of the neural tube ; us, primitive segment. For the tracts which alternate with the primitive segments lag behind in their growth, while the parts lying opposite the middle of seg- ments grow more vigorously, become thickened, and at the same time ad- vance farther ven- trad, penetrating be- tween primitive seg- ment and neural tube. Frontal sections furnish very instruc- tive views of this stage. Fig. 259 ex- hibits such a section, taken from SAGE- MEHL'S work. Inas- much as the longi- tudinal axis of the Lizard embryo em- ployed for the sec- tions was greatly curved, the five segments seen in the section are cut at different heights, the middle one deeper than the two preceding and the two following. In the middle segment the fundament of_ the ganglion (spk) is differentiated and it is bounded by blood-vessels THE ORGANS OF THE OUTER GERM-LAYER. 451 in front and behind, whereas in the .segments that are cut more dorsally, near the origin of the ganglia from the neural tube, the fundaments are still connected with one another. This connection appears to be most conspicuously developed and most per- sistent in the case of the Selachians ; it has been called the longitudinal commis- sure by BALFOUR. Outside the ganglia are found the primitive segments (mp, mp'}, each of which at this time still exhibits within it a narrow fissure. In a monographic treatment of the peripheral {JH$Ml "••. ;..-.M — nervous system BEARD differs from the preceding account, in which BALFOUR, KOLLIKER, BABL, HENSEN, SAGEMEHL, KASTSCHENKO, and others agree. He believes that the fundaments of the ganglia arise, not out of the neural tube, but out •of the deeper cell-layers of the adjacent part of the outer germ-layer. He finds that they are from the beginning separated from each other and seg- mentally arranged. According to him, moreover, they make their appearance earlier than is stated in the preceding account ; for they are already recognisable as especially thickened places in the outer germ-layer at the light and left of the neural plate when the latter first begins to be bent inward. Subsequently, upon the closure of the neural tube, the ganglionic cells come to lie between the raphe and the primitive epidermis. From here they grow •down ventrally at the sides of the brain and spinal cord. BEARD approximates in his results the conception first expressed and subsequently maintained by His. For His derives the ganglionic ridge, not from the raphe of the neural tube, but from a neighboring part of the outer germ-layer, which he names intermediate cord (Zwischenstrang). The accuracy of BEARD'S description is, however, positively denied by KABL and KASTSCHENKO. Different views are entertained concerning the further changes which take place in the fundaments of the spinal ganglia : — According to His and SAGEMEHL the separate ganglionic funda- ments are completely detached from the neural tube, and for a time lie at the side of it without any connection with it whatever. Secondarily a union is again established, through the development of the dorsal nerve-roots, by the formation of nerve-fibrillse. which either grow out from the spinal cord into the ganglion, or from the ganglion into the spinal cord, or in both directions. SAGEMEHL Fig. 259. — Frontal section of a Lizard embryo, after SAGEMEHL. rmt Spinal cord ; spk, neural ridge with thickenings that are converted into the spinal ganglia ; mp', the part of the primitive segment that produces the muscle-plate ; mp, outer layer of the primitive segment. 452 EMBRYOLOGY. favors the first view, His tfce last. All other investigators main- tain that the fundaments of the ganglia, while they increase in size and become spindle-shaped, are permanently united with the neural tube by means of slender cords of ctlls which are metamorphosed into the dorsal roots. If the latter view is correct, the dorsal roots of the nerves must in time alter their place of attachment to the neural tube by moving from the raphe laterally and ventrally. The discrepancy of these accounts is connected with the different interpretations which exist concerning the development of the peri- pheral nerves in general. (b) The Development of the Peripheral Nerves. When one reviews the various opinions which have been expressed concerning the development of the peripheral nerves, it is found that there are in the literature two chief opposing views. The greater number of investigators assume that the peripheral nervous- system is developed out of the central, — that the nerves grow forth I'rmn. the In'Htu <(nutor germ-layer, independ- ently of the central nervous syst< in. The accounts here given concerning a connection, in early stages of develop- ment, of certain nerve-trunks with the outer germ-layer, appear to me to afford an indication in favor of the hypothesis expressed by my brother and me, that the sensory nerves of the Vertebrates may have originally been formed out of a sub-epithelial nervous plexus, such as still exists in the epidermis of many Invertebrates. (3) The investigations of the last few years, which have been carried out especially by BALFOUR, MARSHALL, KOLLIKER, WIJHE, FRORIEP, RABL, and KASTSCHSNKO, have produced important results •concerning the development of the cranial nerves, their relations to the head-segments and their value as compared with spinal nerves. On the brain, as well as on the spinal cord, there arise roots, some of which are dorsal, some ventral. Even at the time when the brain-plate is not yet fully closed into a tube (fig. 261), there is formed on either side, at the place of its bending over into the primitive epidermis, \a neural ridge (vg), which begins rather far forward and may be traced on serial sections uninterruptedly in a posterior direction, where it is continuous with the neural ridge of the spinal cord. When, somewhat later, the closure and the detachment of the brain -vesicles from the primitive epidermis has taken place, the ridge lies on the roof of the vesicles and is fused with them in the median plane. The most of the cranial nerves — namely, the trigeminus with the Gasserian ganglion, the acusticus and facialis with the ganglion acusticum and probably also the .ganglion geniculi, and the glossopharyngeus and vagus with the related ganglion jugulare and g. nodosum — are differentiated out of this fundament in the same manner as the dorsal roots of the spinal nerves. The nerves, which emerge dorsally, afterwards shift their origin downward along the lateral walls of the brain -vesicles toward the base of the latter. All the remaining unenumerated cranial nerves — oculomotorius, trochlearis, abducens, hypoglossus, and accessorius — are developed 458 EMBRYOLOGY. independently of the neural ridge, as individual outgrowths of the? brain-vesicles nearer their base, niul tire comparable with the ventral roots from the spinal cord. FROEIEP finds that the hypoglossns in Mammals possesses dorsal roots,, with small ganglionic fundaments, in addition to Ventral roots. The latter subsequently undergo degeneration. The agreement between cranial and spinal nerves which is ex- pressed in this method of development, becomes still greater and Fig. 261.— Cross section through the hind part of the head of a Chick embryo of 30 hours, after BALFOUK. fe&, Hind-brain; vg, vagus; ep, epiblast ; ch, chorda; x, thickening of hypob!ast (pjssibly a rudiment of the subchordal rod) ; al, throat ; ht, heart ; pp, body-cavity ; so, somatic mesoblast ; sf, splanchnic mesoblast (Darmseitenplafcte) ; hy, hypoblast. acquires a further significance from the fact that in the head also the nerves can be assigned to separate segments in much the same manner as in the trunk. In this particular the conditions are clearest in the Selachians, where, in fact, the head-segments have been most thoroughly investigated, so that I limit myself to a statement of the results acquired in this field by WIJHE. According to WIJHE nine * segments are distinguishable in the head of Selachians. To the first segment belongs the ramus> * [Recent investigations indicate that the head-segments in Selachians ara much more numerous. — TRANSLATOR.] THE ORGANS OF THE OUTER GERM-LAYER. 45$ ophthalmicus of the trigeminus and, as motor root, the oculo- motorius. The second segment is supplied by the remaining part of the trigeminus and the trochlearis, the latter having a ventral origin. The dorsal roots of the third (and fourth?) segments are represented by the acustico-facialis, the ventral roots by the abducens. The fifth segment possesses only the exclusively sensory glossopharyngeus, which arises from the neural ridge. The segments from the sixth to the ninth inclusive are innervated by the vagus and the hypoglossus, the former of which represents a series of dorsal roots, the latter a series of ventral ones. According to WIJHE'S account, notwithstanding the general agree- ment, there still exists a considerable difference between the innervation of the cephalic segments and that of the trunk-segments. For in the head the ventral, motor roots (oculomotorius, trochlearis, abducens, hypoglossus) supply only a part of the musculature- — the eye- muscles and certain muscles that run from the skull to the pectoral girdle ; that is to say, muscles which, as has already been stated, are developed out of the cephalic segments. Other groups of muscles, which arise from the lateral plates of the head, are innervated by the trigeminus and facialis, which have a dorsal origin. Thus the dorsalTbots of the nerves in the head would be distinguished from those in the trunk by the important fact that they contain motor as well as sensory fibres. BELL'S law would consequently possess a very limited application for the head-region of Vertebrates, and would have to be replaced by the following law, formulated by WIJHE : — * l ^he dorsal roots of the head-nerves are not exclusively sensory, but also innervate the muscles that arise from the lateral plates, not, however, those from the primitive segments (somites)." " The ventral roots are motor, but innervate only the muscles of the primitive segments (somites), not those of the lateral plates." In view of this fundamental difference, I desire to express a doubt whether there are not after all enclosed in the facialis and trigeminus parts which are established as ventral roots, but have hitherto been overlooked, as in the beginning all the ventral roots in the brain (see BALFOUR) were overlooked. According to EABL the nerves of the posterior part of the head only — glossopharyngeus, vagus, accessorius, and hypoglossus — can be compared with the type of spinal nerves ; the nerves of the anterior part of the head, on the contrary, — the olfactorius, options, trigeminus, together with those of the eye- muscles and the acustico-facialis, — belong in a separate category, just as the four most anterior head-segments do. EMBRYOLOGY. As is evident from this brief survey, there still exist inany unsolved problems in the difficult subject of the development of the peripheral nervous system. Without permitting myself to enter upon a further discussion .of the contradictory opinions entertained on this subject, I close this topic with a comparative-anatomical proposition, which appears to me sufficient to furnish the morphological explanation of BELL'S law, or the separate origin of the sensory and motor nerve- • roots. In Amphioxus and the Cyclostomes the motor and sensory nerve- fibres are completely separated, not only at their origin from the spinal cord, but also throughout their whole peripheral distribution. The former pass at once from their origin in the spinal cord to the muscle-segments ; the latter ascend to the surface to be distributed to all parts of the skin to supply its sensory cells and sensory organs. The separation of the peripheral nervous system into a sensory and a motor portion, which is rigorously carried out in Amphioxus and the Cyclostomes, is explained by the fact that the territories to which their ends are distributed are spatially distinct in their origin, since the sensory cells arise from the outer germ-layer, the voluntary muscles from a tract of the middle germ-layer. Therefore the sensory nerve- fibres have been developed from tJte spinal cord in connection with the outer germ-layer, the motor fibres in relation with the muscle- S3gments. I regard the sub-epithelial position of the sensory nerve-fibres as the original one, just as we find in many Invertebrates the whole peripheral sensory nervous system developed as a plexus in the deepest portion of the epidermis. The important conditions above described— according to \vhich many denial nerves (norvus hiteralis, etc., fig. 262 nl) are fused with the epidermis at the time of their origin, and only subsequently become detached from it and sink deeper into the underlying mesenchyme — appear to me to indicate_ that such a position was the primitive one in the case of Vertebrates also. I look upon the union of the sensory and motor nerve-fibres into mixed trunks (which occurs soon after their separate origin from the spinal cord, in the case of all Vertebrates except Amphioxus and the Cyclostomes) as a secondary condition, and maintain that it is caused especially by the following embryological influences : by the change in the position of the spinal cord and the muscular masses, and by the great increase in the amount of the connective substances. THE ORGANS OF THE OUTER GERM-LAYER. Fig. 262. — Cross section thioigh the anterior part of tl e trink of an embry of Scyllium, after BALFOUR. Between the clorsal wall of the trunk and its ventral wall, where the attachment of the stalk of the yolk-sac is cut, there is stretched a thick richly cellular mesentery, which completely divides the body-cavity into right and left halves. Within the mesentery the duodenum (du), from which the fund xment of the pancreas (pan) is given off dorsally and the funda- ment of the liver (hp.d) ventrally, is twice cut through. In addition, the place where the vitelline duct [umbilical canal] (umc) joins the duodenum is visible. tp.c, Spinal cord ; s.pg, ganglion of posteiior root ; ar, anterior root ; dn, dorsally directed nerve springing from the posterior root ; mp, muscle-plate ; mp', part of the muscle-p'ate already converted into muscles ; mp.l, part of the muscle-plate which gives rise to the mu-cles of the limbs ; nl, nervus lateralis ; ao, aorta ; c/i. chorda ; sy.g, sympathetic ganglion ; ca.v, cardinal vein ; sp./i, spinal nerve ; sd, segmental (archinephric) duct ; st, segmental tube. 462 EMBRYOLOGY. Since the spinal cord comes to lie in deeper layers of the body far away from its place of origin, the dermal nerves must follow it, and therefore their origins are correspondingly farther separated from their terminations. Since also, on the other hand, the muscle- plates grow around the neural tube, certain motor and sensory nerve-cords are brought near to each other in their passage to their peripheral distribution. And this will occur especially in all cases where the motor and sensory peripheral terminations lie at a great distance from the origin of the nerves out of the spinal cord, as, for example, in the case of the limbs. The mutual approximation of sensory and motor nerve-tracts thus brought about will finally lead to the formation of common tracts, according to the same principle of simplified organisation in accordance with which the blood-vessels also adapt themselves closely to the course of the nerves. (c) The Development of the Sympathetic System The development of the sympathetic nervous system has as yet been investigated by only a few observers. BALFQUR first announced that it arose in connection with the cranial and spinal nerves, and therefore was, like the latter, really derived from the outer germ- layer, In the Selachians he found the sympathetic ganglia (fig. 262 •sy.g} as small enlargements of the chief trunks of the spinal nerves (sp.ii) ja little below their ganglia (sp.g). In older embryos, according to BALFOUR'S account, they recede from the spinal ganglia, and then at a later period unite with one another, by the -development of a longitudinal commissure, into a continuous cord (Grenzstrang). The origin of the sympathetic system has been the most thoroughly studied by ONODI in researches covering several classes of Verte- brates. According to him the sympathetic ganglia arise directly, as BALFOUR suggested and as BEARD has also lately reiterated, from the spinal ganglia. The ventral ends of the spinal ganglia undergo proliferation, as is best seen in Fishes. The proliferated part de- taches itself, and, as fundament of a sympathetic ganglion, moves ventrally. The fundaments of the individual segments are at first separate from one another. The cord (Grenzstrang) is a secondary^ product, produced by the growing out of the individual ganglia toward each other and the union of the outgrowths. Afterwards the sympathetic ganglia and plexuses of the body-cavity are derived from this part. THE ORGANS OF THE OUTER GERM-LAYER. 463 SUMMARY. Central Nervous System. 1. The central nervous system is developed out of the thickened region of the outer germ- layer which is designated as the medullary plate. 2. The medullary plate is folded together to form the medullary tube (medullary ridges, medullary groove). 3. The formation of the neural tube exhibits three principal modifications : (a) Amphioxus, (b) Petromyzon, Teleosts, (c) the re- maining Vertebrates. 4. The lateral walls of the medullary tube become thickened, whereas the dorsal and ventral walls remain thin ; the latter come to occupy the depths of the anterior and posterior longitudinal fissures, and constitute the commissures of the lateral halves of the spinal cord. 5. The spinal cord at first fills the whole length of the vertebral •canal, but it grows more slowly than the latter, and finally terminates at the second lumbar vertebra (explanation of the oblique course of the lumbar and sacral nerves). 6. The part of the neural tube which forms the brain becomes segmented into the three primary cerebral vesicles (primary fore- brain vesicle, mid-brain vesicle, hind-brain vesicle). 7. The lateral walls of the fore-brain vesicle are evaginated to form the optic vesicles, the anterior wall to form the vesicles of the •cerebrum. 8. The hind- brain vesicle is divided by constriction into the vesicles of the cerebellum and the medulla. 9. Thus from the three primary brain- vesicles there finally arise iive secondary ones arranged in a single series one after the other — (a) cerebral vesicle (that of the hemispheres), (b) between-brain vesicle with the laterally attached optic vesicles, (c) mid-brain vesicle, (d) vesicle of the cerebellum, (e) vesicle of the medulla oblongata. 10. The originally straight axis uniting the brain-vesicles to one another later becomes at certain places sharply bent, in consequence of which the mutual relations of the vesicles are changed (cephalic flexure, pontal flexure, nuchal flexure). The cephalic or parietal protuberance at the surface of the embryo corresponds to the cephalic flexure, the nuchal protuberance to the nuchal flexure. 404 EMBRYOLOGY. 11. The separate parts of the brain are derivable from the five brain-vesicles ; the accompanying table (MIHALKOVICS, SCHWALBE) gives a survey of the subject. 12. In the metamorphoses of the vesicles the following processes take place : (a) certain regions of the walls become more or less thickened, whereas other regions undergo a diminution in thickness and do not develop nervous substance (roof -plates of the third and fourth ventricles) ; (6) the walls of the vesicles are infolded 'r (c) some of the vesicles (first and fourth) greatly exceed in their growth the remaining ones(between-brain, mid-brain, after-brain, or medulla oblongata). 13. The four ventricles of the brain and the aqueductus Sylvii are derived from the cavities of the vesicles. 14. Of the five vesicles that of the mid-brain is the most conser- vative and undergoes the least metamorphosis. 15. The vesicles of the between-brain and after-brain exhibit similar alterations : their upper walls or roof -plates are reduced in thickness to a single layer of epithelial cells, and in conjunction with the growing pia mater produce the choroid plexuses (anterior,, lateral, posterior choroid plexus ; anterior, posterior brain-fissure). 16. The cerebral vesicle is divided by the development of the longitudinal (interpallial) fissure and the falx cerebri into lateral halves, the two vesicles of the cerebral hemispheres. 17. In Man the cerebral hemispheres finally exceed in volume all the remaining parts of the brain, and grow from above and from the sides as cerebral mantle over the other brain-vesicles (from the second to the fifth inclusive) or the brain-stalk. 18. In the folding of the walls of the hemispheres there are to be distinguished fissures and sulci. 19. The fissures (fo;sa Sylvii, fissura hippocampi, fissura choroidear fissura calcarina, fissura oc-cipitalis) are complete folds of the wall of the brain, by means of which there are produced deep incisions in the surface and corresponding projections into the lateral ventricles (corpus striatum, cornu Ammonis, fold of the choroid plexus, calcar avis). 20. The sulci are incisions limited to the cortical portion of the wall of the brain, and are deeper or shallower according to the time of their formation (primary, secondary, tertiary sulci). 21. In general the fissures appear earlier thr-.ii the sulci. 22. The olfactory nerve is not equivalent to a peripheral nerve- trunk, but, like the optic vesicle and optic nerve, a special part of THE ORGANS OF THE OUTER GERM-LAYER. 46f 1 i < a «" 6 .2 W 2 W B c/j w 3 ^9 . 0 ;-H o.g l| B '5 c8 'o ^ 'C -*f -c C ^ 3 !/} "r^ Q^ C3 ^ 0 £ * £ £, >4« "S ce fl LATERAL WALLS. Pedunculi cerebel] Crura cerebelli acl pontem. Processus cerebelli cerebrum. Laqueus. Brachia conjunctiv Corpus geniculatui mediale. Thalamus opticus cerebral hemispheres, commissura anterior. :um pellucidum. .5 »§'» •2 a? .5 .g g & 1 Mombrana tecto ventriculi quan (obex, ligula) Velum medulla] losterius cerebell Velum medullai anterius Corpora quadrigemina. ommissura poste: Glandula pineali Membrana tectoi ventriculi terti (tEenia thalamf ffl jH ^, •— ' O _rt .„• ^ •ll a ^'«S'|'2 ci f^ ~% C W 3 3 r-^ O ^ ^ a § "c §•2 ^ o T3.o Illdll S r^ , W T^ c ^ rt 2 Q^ r^ O j_, [^ j ^ rQ Q ^ o o t> 's ^-S Cg 0) "rO C O •£ «M +•> G O ^ fc £ o || | g 's 1 1 u J £ £ § '^| 5 OH •5 a C1 g; .S C8 ^ — ^ .^ "eg '^ r; 0 &S ll § rill" i ^ S-2 | of'S ^ »-H « '"I & "in a jiff £ t> O > §^ O > PQJD « > W S 3 i— ( § ^3 IS y^N N^^ s ^^ w H 4j| 1 S s I'll " c ^ w; 53 Q_j C ;> t— i £ g > £ 2 466 EMBRYOLOGY. the brain produced by an evagination of the frontal lobe of the cerebral hemisphere (lobus or bulbus olfactorius with tract us olfac- torius). (Enormous development of the olfactory lobes in lower Vertebrates, — Sharks, — degeneration in Man.) Peripheral Nervous System. 23. The spinal ganglia are developed out of a neural ridge (crest), which grows outward and downward from the raphe of the neural tube on either side between the tube and the primitive epidermis, and becomes thickened in the middle of each primitive segment into a ganglion. 24. The spinal ganglia therefore arise, like the neural tube itself, from the outer germ-layer. 25. The sympathetic ganglia of the longitudinal cord (Grenz- strang) are probably detached parts of the spinal ganglia. 26. Concerning the development of the peripheral nerve-fibres there are different hypotheses : — First hypothesis. The peripheral nerve-fibres grow out from the central nervous system and only secondarily unite with their peripheral terminal apparatus. Second hypothesis. The fundaments of the peripheral terminal apparatus (muscles, sensory organs) and the central nervous system are connected from early stages of development by means of filaments which become nerve- fibres (HENSEN). 27. Anterior and posterior nerve-roots are developed on tl e spinal cord separately from each other, one ventrally, the other dorsal ly. 28. The cranial nerves arise in part like posterior, in part like anterior roots of spinal nerves. 29. The following cranial nerves with their ganglia, which are comparable with spinal ganglia, are developed out of a neural ridge which grows out from the raphe of the brain-vesicles : the trigeminus with the ganglion Gasseri, the acusticus and faeialis with the gang- lion acusticum and g. geniculi, the g-lossopharyngeus and vagus with the ganglion jugulare and g. nodosum. 30. The oculomotorius, trcchlearis, abducens, hypoglossus, and accessorius are developed like ventral roots of spinal nerves. 31. The olfactory and optic nerves are metamorphosed parts of the brain. THE ORGANS OF THE OUTER GERM-LAYER. 467 The Development of the Sensory Organs, Eye, Ear, and Organ of Smell. As the outer germ-layer is the parental tissue of the central nervous system, so also does it form the substratum for the higher .sensory organs, the eye, the ear, and the organ of smell. For it furnishes the sensory epithelium, a component which, in comparison with the remaining parts, derived from the mesenchyma, is, it is true, of very small volume, but, notwithstanding, by far the most important both from a functional and a morphological point of view. Whether a sensory organ is adapted for seeing, hearing, smelling, or tasting depends primarily upon the character of its sensory epithelium, i.e., upon whether it is composed of optic, auditory, olfactory, or gustatory cells. But also morphologically the epithelial part is preeminent, because it is chiefly this which determines the fundamental form of the sensory organs and affords the fixed centre around which the remaining accessory components are arranged. The genetic connection with the outer germ-layer may be most clearly recognised in many Invertebrates, inasmuch as here the sensory organs are permanently located in the epidermis. whereas in Vertebrates, as is well known, they are, for the sake of protection, embedded in deep-lying tissues. I begin with the eye, and then proceed to the organ of hearing and that of smell. ^ A. The Development of the Eye. As has already been stated in the description of the brain, the lateral walls of the primary fore-brain (figs. 234, 263) are evaginated ff* Fig. 263. — Brain of a human embryo of the third week (Lg). Profile reconstruction, after His. retina itself, or the invaginated part, would be wanting. Fig. 272.— Plastic representation of the optic cup with lens and vitreous body. ttb, Outer wall of the cup; ib, its inner wall ; h, space between the two walls, which afterwards en- tirely disappears ; Sn, fundament of the optic nerve (stalk of the optic vesicle with groove-for- mation along its lower face) ; uus, choroid fissure ; gl, vitreous body ; I, lens. THE ORGANS OF THE OUTER GERM-LAYER. 485 Originally the optic nerve is a tube with a small lumen, which unites the cavity of the optic vesicle with the third ventricle (fig. 264 A). It is gradually converted into a solid cord. In the case of most Vertebrates this is produced simply by a thickening of the walls of the stalk, due to cell-proliferation, until the cavity is obliterated. In Mammals only the larger portion, that which adjoins the brain, is metamorphosed in this manner ; the smaller part, that which is united with the optic vesicle, is, on the contrary, infolded by the prolongation of the choroid fissure backward for some distance, whereby the ventral wall is pressed in against the dorsal. Con- sequently the optic nerve here assumes the form of a groove, in which is imbedded a connective-tissue cord with a blood-vessel that becomes the arteria centralis retinae. By the growing together of the edges of the groove, the cord afterwards becomes completely enclosed. For a time the optic nerve consists exclusively of spindle-shaped, radially arranged cells in layers, and resembles in its finer structure the wall of the brain and the optic vesicle. Different views are held concerning Hs further metamorphoses, and especially concerning the origin of norve-fibres in it. Differences similar to those concerning the origin of the peripheral nerve-fibres are maintained. Upon this point three theories have been brought forward. According to the older view, which LTEBERKUHN shares, the optic fibres are developed in loco by the elongation of the spindle-shaped cells. According to His, KOLLIKER, and W. MULLER, on the con- trary, the wall of the optic vesicle furnishes the sustentative tissue only, whereas the nerve-fibi es grow into it from outside, either from the brain toward the retina (His, KOLLJKER), or in the reverse direction {MULLER). The stalk of the optic vesicle would constitute, according to this view, only a guiding structure as it were — would predeter- mine the way for its growth. When the ingrowth has taken place, the sustentative cells are, as KOLLIKER describes them, arranged radially and so united with one another that they constitute a delicate framework with longitudinally elongated spaces. In the latter are lodged the small bundles of very fine non-nuclear nerve- fibres and numerous cells, arranged in longitudinal rows, which likewise belong to the epithelial sustentative tissue and help to complete the trestle-work. The embryonic optic n^rve is enveloped in a connective-tissue sheath, which is separated, as in the case of the brain and secondary optic cup, into an inner, soft, vascular and an outer compact 486 EMBRYOLOGY. fibrous layer. The former, or the pial sheath, unites the pia mater of the brain and the choroid membrane of the eye ; the latter, or the dnral sheath, is a continuation of the dura mater and at the eye- ball becomes continuous with the sclerotica. Later the optic nerve acquires a still more complicated structure, owing to the fact that vascular processes of the pial sheath grow into it and provide the nerve-bundles and the epithelial sustentative cells belonging to them with connective-tissue investments. As has been previously stated, the direction in which optic fibres grow into* the stalk of the optic vesicle is still a subject of controversy. His, with whom KOLLIKEB is in agreement, maintains that they grow out from groups of gang- lionic cells (thalamus opticus, corpora quadrigeraina), and are only secondarily distributed in the retina. He supports his view on the one hand by the agree- ment in this particular which exists with the development of the remaining peripheral nerves, and on the other by the circumstance that the nerve-fibres- are first distinctly recognisable in the vicinity of the brain. W. MtiLLEB, on the contrary, believes that the outgrowth takes place in the opposite direction ; he maintains that the nerve-fibres arise as prolongations of the ganglionic cells located in the retina, and that they enter into union with the central nervous apparatus only secondarily. He is strengthened in his opinion by the conditions in Petromyzon, which he declares to be one of th& most valuable objects for the solution of the controversy concerning the origin of the optic nerve. I refer, moreover, in connection with this controversy, to the section which treats of the development of the peripheral nervous system: (p. 452). (e) The Development of the Accessory Apparatus of the Eye. There are associated with the eyeball auxiliary apparatus, which serve in different ways for the protection of the cornea : the eyelids with the Meibomian glands and the eyelashes, the lachrymal glands and the lachrymal ducts. The eyelids, the upper and under, are developed at an early period by the formation, at some distance from the margin of the cornea, of two folds of the skin, which protrude beyond the surface. The folds grow over the cornea from above and below until their edges meet and thus produce in front of the eyeball the conjnnctival sac, which opens out through the fissure between the lids. The sac derives its name from the fact that the innermost layer of the lid-fold, which is reflected on to the anterior surface of the eyeball at the fornix con- junctivse, is of the nature of a mucous membrane, and is designated as the conjunctiva, or connecting membrane, of the eye. In many Mammals and likewise in Man there is during embryonic life a temporary closure of the conjunctival sac. The edges of the lids THE ORGANS OF THF OUTER GERM-LAYER. 487 become united throughout their whole extent, their epithelial invest- ments fusing with each other. In Man the concrescence begins in the third month, and usually undergoes retrogression a short time before birth. But in many Reptiles (Snakes) the closure is perma- nent. Thus a thin transparent membrane is formed in front of the cornea. In Man during the concrescence of the eyelids there are developed at their margins the Meibomian glands. The cells of the rete Malpighii begin to proliferate and to send into the middle connective- tissue plate of the eyelid solid rods, which afterwards become covered with lateral buds. The glands, at first entirely solid, acquire a lumen by the fatty degeneration and dissolution of the axial cells. At about the time of the development of the Meibomian glands, the formation of the eyelashes takes place ; this corresponds with the development of the ordinary hair, and therefore will be considered along with the latter in a subsequent section of this chapter. In most of the Vertebrates there is associated with the upper and under lids still a third, the nictitating membrane or membrana nictitans, which is formed at the inner [median] sid? of the eye as a vertical fold of the conjunctiva. In Man it is present only in a rudimentary condition as plica semilunaris. A number of small glands which are developed in it produce a small reddish nodule, the caruncula lacrymalis. The lachrymal gland is an additional auxiliary organ of the eye, which is destined to keep the sac of the conjunctiva moist and the anterior surface of the cornea clean. In Man it is developed in the third month through the formation of buds from the epithelium of the conjunctival sac on the outer side of the eye, at the place where the conjunctiva of the upper lid is continuous witli that of the eye- ball. The buds form numerous branches, and are at first solid, like the Meibomian glands, but gradually become hollow, the cavity beginning with the chief outlet and extending toward the finer branches. A special efferent lachrymal apparatus, which leads from the inner angle of the eye into the nasal cavity, has been developed for the removal of the secretions of the various glands collected in the conjunctival sac, but particularly the lachrymal fluid. Such an apparatus is present in all classes of Vertebrates from the Amphibia upward ; its development has been especially investigated by BORN in a series of researches. In the Amphibia it begins to be formed at the time the process of 488 EMBRYOLOGY. chondrification becomes observable in the membranous nasal capsule. At that time the mucous layer of the epidermis, along a line that extends from the median side of the eye directly to the nasal cavity, undergoes proliferation and sinks into the underlying connective- tissue layer as a solid ridge. Then from the nose to the eye the ridge becomes constricted off, subsequently acquires a lumen, whereby it is converted into a canal lined with epithelium, and opens out into the nasal cavity. Toward the eye-end the canal is divided into two tubules, which at the time of detachment from the epidermis remain in connection with the conjunctival sac and suck up out of it tlr« lachrymal fluid. In Birds and Mammals, including Man (fig. 273), the place where the lachrymal duct is located is early marked externally by a furrow which runs From the inner angle of the eye to the nasal chamber. By means of this furrow two ridges, which play an important part in the for- mation of the face, — the maxillary process and the outer nasal process, — are sharply marked off from each other ; these will engage our atten- tion later. According to COSTE and KOLLIKER the lachrymal duct arises by the simple approximation and con- crescence of the edges of the lachrymal groove. These older conclusions have been contradicted by BORN and LEGAL, one of whom has investigated Reptiles and Birds, the other Mammals. According to them there arises, in nearly the same manner as in Amphibia, through proliferation of the mucous epithelium, at the bottom of the lachrymal groove an epithelial ridge, which becomes detached but is not converted into a canal until a rather late period. When we raise the question, how phylogenetically the lachrymal duct may have first originated, we shall doubtless find that it has been derived from a groove, by means of which the sac of the con- junctiva and the nasal chamber are first put into connection. When, therefore, we see the lachrymal duct established from the very begin- ning simply as a solid ridge, as for example in the Amphibia, we must call to mind how in other cases also originally groove-like fundaments, such as the medullary furrow, make their appearance, under special circumstances, as solid ridges. Fig. 273.— Head of a human embryo, from which the mandibular pro- cesses have been removed to allow a survey of the roof of the primitive oral cavity. THE ORGANS OF THE OUTER GERM-LAYER. 489 Finally, as far as regards the development of the lachrymal tubules in Birds and Mammals, BORN and LEGAL refer the upper tubule to the proximal part of the epithelial ridge, and maintain that the lower one buds out from the upper. EWETSKY, on the contrary, declares that the proximal end of the epithelial ridge expands at the inner angle of the eye. and becomes divided by the ingrowth of underlying connective tissue, and metamorphosed into the two tubules, so that both arise from a common fundament. SUMMARY. 1. The lateral walls of the primary fore-brain vesicle are evaginatecl to form the optic vesicles. 2. The optic vesicles remain united by means of a stalk, the future optic nerve, with that part of the primary fore-brain vesicle •which becomes the bet ween -brain. 3. The optic vesicle is converted into the optic cup through the invagination. of its lateral and lower walls by the fundaments of the lens and vitreous body. 4. At the place where the lateral wall of the primary optic vesicle encounters the outer germ-layer, the latter becomes thickened, then depressed into a pit, and finally constricted off as a lens-vesicle. 5. The cells of the posterior wall of the lens-vesicle grow out into lens-fibres, those of the anterior wall become the lens-epithelium. 6. The fundament of the lens is enveloped at the time of its principal growth by a vascular capsule (tunica vasculosalentis), which afterwards entirely disappears. 7. The mernbrana capsulo-pupillaris is the anterior part of the tunica vasculosa lentis and lies behind the pupil. 8. The development of the vitreous body causes the choroid fissure. 9. The optic cup has double walls ; it consists of an inner and an outer epithelium, which are continuous with each other at the open- ing of the cup, which embraces the lens, and at the choroid fissure. 10. Mesenchymatic cells from the vicinity grow in between the lens and the somewhat closely applied epidermis to form the cornea and DESCEMET'S membrane, the latter being separated from the tunica vasculosa lentis by a fissure, the anterior chamber of the eye. 11. The optic cup is differentiated into a posterior portion, within the territory of which its inner layer becomes thickened and con- stitutes the retina, and an anterior portion, which begins at the ora 490 EMBRYOLOGY. serrata, becomes very much reduced in thickness, and extends over the front surface of the lens, growing into the anterior chamber of the eye until the originally wide opening of the cup is reduced to the- size of the pupil. 12. The anterior attenuated portion of the cup is, in turn, divided into two zones, of which the posterior becomes folded at the periphery of the equator of the lens to form the ciliary processes, whereas in front it remains smooth ; so that in the whole cup three part* may now be distinguished, as retina, pars ciliaris, and pars iridia- retinae. 13. Corresponding to the three portions of the epithelial optic cup,, the adjoining connective -tissue envelope takes on somewhat different conditions as the choroid proper, and as the connective-tissue frame- work of the ciliary body and that of the iris. 14. The skin surrounding the cornea becomes infolded to form the upper and lower eyelids and the nictitating membrane, of which the- last is rudimentary in Man, persisting only as the plica semilunaris. 15. The epithelial layers of the edges of the two eyelids grow together in the last months of development, but become separated again before birth. 16. The lachrymal groove in Mammals passes from the inner angle of the eye, between the maxillary and outer nasal processes,. to the nasal chambsr. 17. The lachrymal duct for carrying away the lachrymal fluid is- formed by the downgrowth and constricting off of an epithelial ridge from the bottom of the lachrymal groove, the ridge becoming hollow. 18. The two lachrymal tubules are developed by the division of the- epithelial ridge at the angle of the eye. B. The Development of the Organ of Hearing. In the case of the ear numerous parts of quite different origins unite, in much the same manner as in the case of the eye, to form a^ single very complicated apparatus ; of these, too, it is the portion to which the auditory nerve is distributed— the membranous labyrinth with its auditory epithelium — that is by far the most important, out- stripping as it does all the remaining parts in its development : it must consequently be considered first. THE ORGANS OF THE OUTER GEltM-LAYER 491 («) The Development of the Otocyst into the Labyrinth. The membranous labyrinth is preeminently a product of the outer germ-layer. However great its complication in the adult is, — a complication that has given it the name labyrinth, — its earliest fundament is exceedingly simple. It arises on the dorsal surface of the embryo in the region of the medulla oblongata (fig. 263 gb), above the first visceral cleft and the attachment of the second visceral arch (fig. 274 above the numeral 3). Here over a circular territory the filter germ-layer becomes thickened and soon sinks down into an auditory pit. This process can be traced very easily in the embryo Chick on and after the end of the second day of incubation, and in the embryo Rabbit fifteen days old. The auditory nerve makes its way from the brain, near at hand, to the fundus of the pit, where it terminates in a ganglionic enlargement. The BonyFJshes alone ex- hibit a cfeviation from these conditions. Just as the central nervous system was in their case formed not as a tube, but as a solid body, and the eye not as a vesicle, but as an epithelial ball, so we see here that instead of an auditory pit there is formed by means of the proliferation of the outer germ -layer a solid epithelial plug, This, like the brain-tube and the eye-vesicle, acquires an internal chamber at a later period only — namely, after being constricted off. The next stage shows the pit converted into an auditory vesicle. In the Chick this takes place in the course of the third day. The- invagination of the outer germ-layer grows deeper and deeper, and by the approximation of its margins becomes pear-shaped ; soon the connection with the outer germ-layer becomes entirely lost, as is shown by a section through the head of an embryo Sheep (fig. 275 Ib). In nearly all Vertebrates the auditory vesicle is constricted off from the ectoderm in the same mariner. The Selachians are an exception : here the auditory vesicle which is metamorphosed into the labyrinth retains permanently its connection with the surface of the Fig. 274.— Head of a human embryo 75 mm. long, neck measurement. From His, "Menschliche Embryonen." The auditory vesicle lies atove the first visceral cleft. In the circumference of the visceral cleft there are to be seen six elevations, de- signated by numerals, from which the external ear is developed. 492 EMBRYOLOGY body in the form of a long narrow tube, which traverses the cartila- ginous primordial cranium and is in union dorsally with the epidermis at the surface of the body, where it possesses an external opening. In its first fundament the organ of hearing in Vertebrates resembles in the Itl'jJti'xt dei/ree those struct ares which in the Invertebrates are, interpreted as organs of hearing. These are lymph-filled vesicles lyiiiir under the skin, which are likewise developed out of the epidermis. Either they are wholly constricted off from the epidermis, or they remain connected with it by means of a long, ciliate, epithelial canal, as in the Cephalopoda, even after they have become surrounded by connective tissue. In both cases the vesicles are lined with epithelium which con sists of two kinds of cell . first of low, flat which ordinarily exhibit ciliary movements and thereby put in motion the fluid within the vesicle, and secondly of longer cylindrical, or thread-like, au- ditory cells with stiff hairs, Fig. 275.— Vertical [cross] section through the vesicle of the labyrinth of an embryo Sheep 1-3 cm. long, after BOETTCHER. Magnified 30 diameters. nh, Wall of the after-brain ; rl, recessus labyrinth! ; Ib, vesicle of the labyrinth ; yc, ganglion coch- leare,, which is in contact with a part of the labyrinth-vesicle (dc) that grows out into the ductus cochlearis. which project into the endo- lymph. The auditory cells are either distributed individually over the inner surface of the auditory vesicle or arranged in groups, or they are united at a particular place into an auditory epithelium, — the au- ditory patch (macula acustica) or the auditory ridge (crista acustica), — which may be either single or double. To all the auditory vesicles of the Invertebrates there is sent, moreover, a nerve which ends at the sensory cells in fine fibrillse. Finally, there is present as a characteristic structure a firm, crystalline body? the otolith, which is suspended in the midst of the endolymph and is ordinarily set in vibration by the motion of the cilia. It consists of crystals of phosphate or carbonate ol lime. Sometimes there is only a single large, in most cases concentrically laminated, spherical body, sometimes a number of small calcareous crystals, which are held together by means of a soft pulpy substance THE ORGANS OF THE OUTER GERM-LAYER. 493 It is difficult to follow the formation of the otoliths within the otocyst. In one case, which FOL was able to follow, they were developed by an epithelial cell in the wall of the vesicle. The cell secretes small calcareous concretions in its protoplasm, becomes enlarged in consequence, and protrudes as an elevation into the endolymph. When it has become more heavily loaded with calcic salts, it is connected with the wall by means of a stalk only, and finally it becomes entirely detached from the wall and falls into the cavity of the vesicle, in which it is kept float- ing and rotating by the ciliate cells. In Vertebrates the otocyst, which, as we have seen, agrees in its first fundament with the organ of hearing in Invertebrates, is con- verted into a very com- plicated structure, — the membranous labyrinth, — the evolution of which in Mammals I shall de- scribe in some detail. ~= dc in some It undergoes metamor- phoses, in which the formation of folds and constrictions plays the principal part (fig. 276). The auditory sac de- tached from the epi- Fig. 276.— Membranous labyrinth of the left side of a [human] embryo, after a wax model by KRAUSE. rl, Recessus labyrinth! ; dc, duetts cochlearis ; lib, pocket from which the horizontal semicircular canal is formed ; oiu', enlargement of the pocket which becomes the ampulla of the horizontal canal ; am (vb), vb', * com- mon pocket from which the two vertical semicircular canals are developed; am (vb), enlargement of the common pocket from which the ampulla of the an- terior vertical canal arises. An opening (6) has been formed in the pocket, through which one sees the recessus labyrinthi. * Region of the pocket which becomes the common arm of the two vertical canals- (sinus superior) ; vb', part of the common pocket which furnishes the posterior vertical canal. dermis, and lying at the side of the after-brain, soon exhibits a tmall, dorsally directed pro- jection, the recessus labyrinthi or ductus end^in^fMticus_(^g. 275 rl). Probably we have to do in this with the remnant of the original stalk by means of which the auditory vesicle was connected with the epidermis. According to some investigators, on the contrary, the stalk disappears entirely and this evagination is a new structure. The first assumption is favored especially by the previously mentioned condition in the Selachians — the presence of a long tube, which maintains a permanent connection between labyrinth and epidermis. 494 EMBRYOLOGY. Later this appendage of the labyrinth (figs. 276-9 rl) grows out dorsally to a great length, during which its walls come into close contact with each other, excepting at the blind end, which is enlarged into a small sac (fig. 279 rl *). * Meanwhile the auditory sac itself (figs. 275-7) begins to be elongated and to be formed into a ventrally directed conical process (dc), the first fundament of the ductus cochlearis, which is curved inward a little toward the brain (fig. 277 ?iA), and the concave side of which Tig. 277.— Cross section through the head of a Sheep embryo 1'6 cm. long, in the region of the labyrinth-sac. On the right side is represented a section which passes through the middle of the sao ; on the left, one that is situated somewhat farther forward. After BOETTCHER. hn, Arditory rerve ; vb, vertical semicircular canal ; yc, ganglion cochleare (spirale) ; dc, ductus cochlearis ; /, inward-projecting fold, whereby the sac of the labyrinth is divided into utriculus and sacculus ; rl, recessus labyrinth! ; nh, after-brain. lic> in rlo.sc contact with th<> previously mentioned ganglionic enlarge- ment (ffc) of the auditory nerve (hn). It will be serviceable in the following description if we now distinguish an upper and a lower division of the labyrinth. They are not yet, it is true, distinctly delimited from each other, but in later stages they become more sharply separated by an inward-projecting fold (figs. 277-9/J. The upper part (pars superior) furnishes the utriculus and the semicircular canals. Of the latter the two vertical canals arise first, the horizontal canal being formed later. The method of their origin THE ORGANS OF THE OUTER GERM-LAYER. 495 was early ascertained by the zoologist RATHKE in the case of Coluber. Recently KRAUSE has still further elucidated the interesting pro- cesses by the construction of wax models of the conditions in mammalian embryos. As is to be seen from the various sections (figs. 277, 278), but still better from the model (fig. 276) produced by reconstruction, the semicircular canals are developed by the protrusion of several evagina- tions of the wall of the saca which have the form of thin pockets or discs (A6, vb) with a semicircular outline. The marginal part of each such e vagina - tion now becomes •considerably en- larged, whereas the remaining portions of the two epithelial layers come into close contact and begin to fuse. As the result of this simple process — the enlargement at the margin and the fusion of the walls which takes place in the middle — there is formed a semicircular canal, which commu- nicates at two places with the original cavity of the vesicle. A.t one of its open- ings the canal is early enlarged into an Ampulla (fig. 276 am and am'). The middle part, in which the fusion has taken place, soon disappears, the epithelial membrane being broken through by a growth of the connective tissue (fig. 276 o). There exists an interesting difference between the development of the horizontal and the two vertical canals, which was discovered by KRAUSE. Whereas the horizontal canal is established as a small pocket by itself (fig. 276 fib), the two vertical canals arise together from a single larye %>ocket-like fundament (tig. 27G am (vb), *, vb'). vb Fig. 278.— Cross section through half of the head of a foetal Sheep 2 cm. long, in the region of the labyrinth, after BOETTCHEI?. Magnified 30 diameters. rl, Recessus labyrinth! ; vb, hb, vertical and horizontal semi- circular canals; U, utriculns; f, inward-projecting fold, by which the labyrinth-sac is divided into utriculus and sacculus; do, ductus cochlearis ; gc, ganglion cochleare. 496 EMBRYOLOGY. The walls of this large pocket come into contact with each other and fuse :it two ditVeivnt |>lac«'<. At one of them there has already been formed, in the preparation from which this model (fig. 276) was constructed, an opening (o) by the resorption of the fused epithelial areas, whereas at the second place (vb1) the epithelial membrane is still preserved. Between the fused parts of the pocket there remains ,i middle region, which is indicated in the ii:o diH'rrentiat' d inlo a firmer connective sul>>iance, which b< conies fibrous, and into a gelatinous tissue (f the auditory nerve. The construction of the intricate cochlea approaches completion with the beginning of the process of ossification. The latter is accom- plished by two methods. First, the cartilaginous capsule ossifies in •the endochoiidral manner, as does the whole cartilaginous os petrosum, of which it constitutes a small part. The osseous tissue thus formed is for a long time spongy and provided with large medullary spaces. Secondly, the previously mentioned fibrous connective-tissue layers — the partitions between the cochlear canals, the connective-tissue axis or the modiolus and the lamina spiralis — undergo direct ossifi- cation. At the same time compact bone-lamella; are laid down from within on the spongy bone-tissue formed from the cartilaginous capsule; these lamellre are formed, as BOETTCHER has shown, by the original perichondrium, which becomes the periosteum. Consequently the bony cochlear capsule, since it is produced by periosteal secretion, may be easily detached from the loose osseous tissue of endochondral origin during early post-natal years. (c) Development of the Accessory Apparatus of the Organ of Hearing. (Middle and External Ear.} With the membranous and bony labyrinth, which are together •called the inner ear, there is associated a subsidiary apparatus, in the same way that the eye-muscles, the lids, and the lachrymal glands and ducts are added to the eyeball, it is made up of structures which are wanting in the lower Vertebrates (Fishes), but, beginning to be developed in the Amphibia, become more and more complete in 506 EMHRYOLOGY. the higher forms. Their function is to transmit vibrations to thi* labyrinth, and consequently they are together called the conducting apparatus. From their position they are also known as middle and outer ear. The former consists in Mammals, where it attains its highest development (diagram, fig. 284), of the tympanic* cavitjj^), the Eustachian tube (Tb), and the tlmv auditory ossicles (.VJ/>) : t he latter, of the tympanic membrane i ..I//). the external ineatus (J/«e), and the external ear or auricle (M). The statement just made, that these parts are wanting in Fishes, is to be taken cum grano salis : it is as a sound-conducting apparatus only that they are wanting, for they are present even in the case of Fishes, but only as structures of a different function and in a more simple condition. For the various accessory apparatus of the organ of hearing are developed out of th.e first visceral cleft and certain parts ivhich are located in - te «•••••••••••••••£•» • its periphery. Here also it will be well to acquaint ourselves with the original — the initial condition, for which the Selachians may serve as an example. In them the greater part of the first visceral cleft, which is situated between the mandibular and hyoid arches and between the nervus trigeminus and n. acustico-facialis, disappears ; at the side of the throat it becomas closed, remaining open only at the origin, or base, of the two visceral arches. It then has the form of a short canal, which possesses a small round opening at its inner and another at its outer end, and which passes in very close proximity to the labyrinth-region of the skull, in which the organ of hearing is located. The canal, here called ihe spiracle, has no longer anything to do with respiration, since the branchial leaflets on its wall have undergone degeneration. Owing to its position in the immediate vicinity of the labyrinth, it presents, even in the Selachians, the best course for the propagation of the sound-waves to the inner ear. and this is the chief ground for its entering wholly into the service of the organ of hearing in the remaining Vertebrates, and for its bein^ developed in a more serviceable manner for this particular function. The structures in the higher Vertebrates corresponding to the spiracle of the 'Selachians are (fig. 284) the tympanic cavity (Ct), the Eustachiaa tube (Tb), and the external meatus (Mae}. The^- likewise are developed out of the upper part of t lie first visceral cleft. Although it has recently been asserted by certain investi- gators (URBANTSCHITSCH) that they have nothing to do with the first visceral cleft, but are established independently by the e vagina- THE ORGANS OP THE OUTER GERM-LAYER. 507 tion of the pharynx, this view is opposed not only to comparative- anatomical, considerations, but also to statements of KOLLIKER, MOLDENHAUER, and HOFFMANN, which relate to the development in Reptiles, Birds, and Mammals. In the classes of Vertebrates just mentioned the first visceral Fig. 284.— Diagrammatic representation of the whole organ of hearing in Man, from WIEDERSHEIM. Otits depth : an inner one on the side toward the pharyngeal cavity, and an outer one which is surrounded by ridges of the first and second visceral arches. The inner depression, which is called canalis or snlcns tubo-tyin- panicus (pharyngo-tympanicus), is located, like the spiracle, between trigeminus and acustico-facialis. It becomes the middle ear, and is enlarged by an evagination that is directed upward, outward, and backward. The evagination inserts itself between the labyrinth and the place of closure of the first visceral cleft, and takes the form of a laterally compressed space, which is now to be distinguished as tympanic cavity from the tubular remnant of the sulcus tympanicus, or Eustachian tube. Its lumen is very small, especially in the case of advanced embryos of Man and Mammals, its lateral and median walls being almost in immediate contact. This results chiefly from the fact that there is present beneath the epithelial lining of the middle ear a richly developed gelatinous tissue. The latter still encloses at this time structures, — the auditory ossicles and the chorda tympani,— which later come to lie, as it were, free in the tympanic cavity. The tympanic membrane also is now in a condition very unlike that which it afterwards acquires. The history of its formation is by no means so simple as was formerly supposed. For it is not derived exclusively from the narrow closing membrane of the first visceral cleft ; the neighboring parts of the first and second mem- branous visceral arches also participate in its production. The embryonic tympanic membrane is therefore at first a thick con- nective-t issue plate, and encloses at its margins the auditory ossicles, the tensor tympani, and the chorda tympani. The reduction in the thickness of the tympanic membrane takes place at a late period, simultaneously with an increasing enlargement of the tympanic cavity. Both are brought about by shrinkage of the gelatinous tissue, and by an accompanying growth of the mucous membrane lining the tympanic cavity. Wherever the gelatinous tissue disappears the mucous membrane takes its place, inserting itself between the individual ossicles and the chorda tympani, which thus come to lie apparently free in the tympanic cavity. In reality, however, they lie outside of it, for they continue to be clothed on all sides by the growing mucous membrane, and are connected with the wall of the tympanic cavity by nv?ans of folds of that membrane (malleus- ibld, incus-fold, etc.), in much the same manner as the abdominal THE ORGANS OF THE OUTER GERM-LAYER. 509 organs which grow into the body-cavity are invested by the peri- toneum and supported from its walls by the mesenteries. With a reduction in the thickness of the tympanic membrane there occurs a condensation of its connective-tissue substance, whereby it is enabled to fulfil its ultimate function as a vibrating membrane. A more extended discussion of the development of the auditory ossicles will be deferred to a subsequent section, which deals with the origin of the skeleton. At present, only a few words further — con- cerning the formation of the external ear, which, as has already been stated, is derived from a depression on the outer side of the place of closure of the first visceral cleft. Its development has been minutely inves- tigated in the Chick by MOLDENHAUER and in the human embryo by His. As the lateral view of a very young human embryo (fig. 274) shows, the fir st_vi seer al cleft is surrounded by ridge-like margins, which belong to the first and second visceral arches, and are early divided into six elevations designated by Arabic nu- merals. From these is derived the auricle, which therefore involves a rather exten- sive tract of the embryonic head (the pars auricularis). The pocket between the ridges, at the bottom of which the tympanic membrane is met with, becomes the external meatus, This is continually growing deeper owing to the surrounding wall of the side of the face becoming greatly thickened ; finally it is developed into a long canal, the wall of which is in part bony, in part cartilaginous. The six elevations mentioned, which sur- round the orifice of the external meatus, together constitute a bulky ring. The accompanying representation (fig. 285) shows clearly its metamorphosis into the external ear. It shows that out of the elevations 1 and 5 the tragus and antitragus are developed, out of 2 and 3 the helix, and out of 4 the aiitihelix. The lobule of the ear remains for a long time small ; it is not until the fifth month that it becomes more distinct. It is derived from the hillock marked with the numeral 6. At the close of the second month all the essential parts of the external ear are easily Fig. 285. —Fundament of the outer ear of a human embryo, after His. The elevation marked 1 produces the tragus ; 5, the antitragus. The elevations 2 and 3 produce the helix; 4, the antihelix. From the tract 6 is formed the lobule. K, Lower jaw. 510 EMBRYOLOGY. recognisable ; from the third month onward the upper and posterior part of the auricle grows out more from the surface of the head ; and it acquires greater firmness upon the differentiation of the auricular curtilage, which had already begun at the end of the second month. SUMMARY. 1. The most essential part of the organ of hearing, the mem- branous labyrinth, is developed at the side of the after-brain above the first visceral cleft from a pit-like depression of the outer germ- layer. 2. By closure the auditory pit becomes the auditory vesicle ; it sinks down and becomes imbedded in embryonic connective tissue, from which the cranial capsule is subsequently developed. 3. The auditory vesicle acquires the complicated form of the membranous labyrinth by various evaginations of its wall, and becomes differentiated into the utriculus, with the three semicircular canals, into the sacculus with the canalis reunions and the cochlea, AS well as into the recessus vestibuli, by means of which sacculus and utriculus remain permanently connected with each other. 4. The auditory nerve and the auditory epithelium, which are at first single, are likewise divided — as soon as the vesicle is differentiated into a number of regions — into several nerve- branches (nervus vestibuli, n. cochlea) and nerve -terminations (the cristas •acusticae of the three ampullae, a macula acustica for the utriculus and another for the sacculus, and the organ of CORTI). 5. The embryonic connective tissue, in which are enclosed the auditory vesicle and the products of its metamorphosis, is differen- tiated into three parts : — (a) Into a thin connective-tissue layer, which is closely applied to the epithelial wall and together with it constitutes the membranous labyrinth ; (Z>) Into a gelatinous tissue, which becomes liquefied during embryonic life and furnishes the perilymphatic spaces (in the cochlea the scala vestibuli and the scala tym- pani) ; (c) Into a cartilaginous capsule, from which there arises by a process of ossification the bony labyrinth. 6. The middle and outer ear are derived from the upper part •of the first visceral cleft (the spiracle of Selachians) and its periphery. THE ORGANS OF THE OUTER GERM-LAYER. 511 7. The tympanic membrane, which at first is rather thick and only gradually becomes reduced to a thin, tense membrane, is de- veloped out of the closing plate of the first visceral cleft and the adjacent parts of the visceral arches. 8. The tympanic cavity and the Eustachian tube are developed out of a depression on the median side of the tympanic membrane, — the sulcus tubo-tym panic us, — and out of an evagination from it extending upward, outward, and backward. 9. The tympanic cavity is at rirst extremely small, the connective tissue of the mucous membrane that surrounds it being gelatinous [and voluminous]. 10. The auditory ossicles and the chorda tympani lie at first outside the tympanic cavity in the gelatinous tissue of its wall ; it is only after shrivelling of the gelatinous tissue that they come to lie in folds of the mucous membrane, which project into the now more capacious tympanic cavity (incus-fold, malleus-fold). 11. The external meatus is developed from the periphery of the' depression that lies on the lateral side of the tympanic membrane ; the auricle arises from six elevations, which are converted into t*K^*^V. tragus, aiititragus, helix, antihelix, and the lobule of the ear. TA^ C. The Development of the Organ of Smell. The organ of smell is, like the eye and ear, a product of the outer germ-layer, from which it is developed somewhat later than the two higher sensory organs. It first becomes noticeable, at either side of the broad frontal process (fig. 274) previously described, as a thickening of the outer gsrm-layer which His has designated in human embryos as nasal area. Both fundaments soon become more distinct owing to the fact that each nasal area becomes depressed into a kind of trough, the edges of which rise up as folds (fig. 286). AIL olfactory lobe, which has been formed meantime by an evagina- tion of the cerebral vesicle, grows out 011 either side to the thick- ened epithelium of this area, where its nerve- fibrillse terminate. The two olfactory pits, which are formed in a similar manner in all Vertebrates with the exception of the Cyclostomes, in which only an unpaired pit arises, are separated from each other by a consider- able distance. They therefore appear at first as distinctly paired structures, whereas in their ultimate condition in the higher Vertebrates they have approached each other toward the median plane and become an apparently impaired organ, the nose. 512 EMBRYOLOGY. The study of the development of the organ of smell acquires additional interest, when one takes into account the comparative - ana- tomical conditions. It is then found that the various stages through which the organ of smell passes during embryonic life, in Mammals for example, have been preserved as permanent conditions in lower classes of Vertebrates. Thus in the case of many groups of Fishes the organ of smell is preserved, as it were, in its initial stage in the form of a pair of pits. Upon closer histological investigation, however, this condition acquires a special interest, be- cause it presents points of comparison with simpler sensory organs which are distri- buted over the in- t e 23 epithelial plug is different. In the latter case the papilla arises at the surface of the skin and is forced down by a ping like epithelial growth ; in the former the epithelial plug first sinks into the under- lying tissue and then at its deep end the hair-papilla is formed by a growth of the corium. The question arises, Which of these two methods of development is to be considered the more primitive? In my opinion it is the formation of the hair-papilla at the surface of the skin. For this is unquestionably the simpler and less complete condition, from which the latter is derivable and through which it is explainable. The hairs sink into the underlying tissue for the purpose of better nourishment and attachment. A parallel is furnished by the development of the teeth. In the Selachians the latter arise (so- far as they are developed as; protective structures in the skin) from papillae which grow from the corium into the epidermis ; in Teleosts- and Amphibia, on the contrary, the teeth, which are found dis- tributed over extensive areas in the oral mucous membrane, are established deep down in that membrane, for epithelial growths in the form of plugs first sink down into the connective tissue, and it is only subsequently that the dental papillae are formed by a process- of growth in the connective tissue at the bottom of the epithelial down growth. Let us return after this comparison to the further development of the hair ; this takes place in the same manner in both the cases distinguished above. The epithelial cells which cover the papil!re multiply and are differentiated into two parts (fig. 292 (7) ; first, into cells that are more remote from the papillae, that become spin die-shaped and united into a small cone, and that by cornification produce the first point of the hair (Aa), and secondly into cells which immediately invest the papilla, remain protoplasmic, and constitute the matrix — the hair- bulb (hz) — by means of which the further growth of the hair takes place. The cells of the hair-bulb, which rapidly increase by division, are added below to the first-formed part of the hair, and by cornification contribute to its elongation. The hair in process of development on the papilla at first lies wholly concealed in the skin and is enveloped on all sides by cells <.f the epithelial plvg, at the bottom of which the first trace of it was formed. From this investment are formed the outer and the inner sheaths of the root (fig. 292 C and D aw and iw). Of these the outer (aw) consists of small protoplasmic cells and is continuous externally with the mucous layer of the epidermis (schl), internally 524 EMBRYOLOGY. with the hair-bulb (hz). The cells in the inner sheath of the root (iw) assume a flattened form and become cornified. In consequence of the growth which proceads from the bulb the hairs are gradually shoved up toward the surface of the epidermis, and at the end of the fifth month in the case of Man begin to break forth to the outside (fig. 292 D ha'). They protrude more and more above the surface of the skin, even in the embryo, and consti- tute at many places of the skin, especially on the head, a rather Tig. 292 A—D. — Four diagrar-s ox t e dev;Iopment o ' t .e hair. A, Dev3lopment of the hair- papilla on the free surface of the skin, as it occurs, according to GOETTE, in many Mammals. B, C, D. Three different stages of the development of the hair in human embryos. ho, Corneous layer o: the epidermis; scld, mucous layer; po., liair-papil a ; hH, germ of hair ; hz, bulb of hair; ha, young hair ; ha', tip of the hair protruding from the hair-follicle ; aw, iic, outer and inner sheath of the root of the hair ; hi>, hair-fol.icld ; td, sebaceous gland thick covering. On account of their minute size and fineness, and because they fall out soon after birth, they are called the downy hair or lanugo. Each hair is a transitory structure of short duration. After a time it falls out and is replaced by a new one. This process begins even during embryonic life. The hairs that fall off get into the amniotic fluid, and since with this fluid they are swallowed by the embryo, they form one of the components of the meconium accumulated in the intestinal caiial. A more extensive change takes place in Man soon THE ORGANS OF THE OUTER GERM-LAYER. 525 after birth with the shedding of the downy hair, which is replaced on many parts of the body by a more vigorous growth of hair. In Mammals the shedding of the old and the formation of new hair exhibits a certain periodicity, which is dependent on the warmer and colder periods of the year. Thus they develop a summer and a winter coat. Even in Man the shedding of the hair is influenced, although less noticeably, by the time of year. . The falling off of the hair is initiated by changes in the part resting on the papilla and called the bulb. The cell-multiplication, by means of which the addition of new corneous substance takes place, ceases ; the falling hair becomes detached from its matrix and its deep end looks as though it were split into shreds ; but it is still retained in the hair-follicle by its closely investing sheath, until it is forcibly removed or is crowded out by the supplementary hair that takes its place. The opinions of investigators still differ concerning the manner in which the supplementary hairs are developed. An especial subject of controversy is the point whether the young hair is formed from an entirely new papilla (STIEDA, FEIERTAG) or from the old one (LANGER, v. EBNER), or whether both methods occur (KOLLIKER, UNNA). It seems to mo that the first view is the correct one, and that the shedding of the hairs is due to the atrophy of their papillce. During this slowly occurring process of degeneration, perhaps even before it begins, the substitution is initiated by the occurrence of an active cell-proliferation at a place in the outer sheath of the root—- which indeed consists of cells rich in protoplasm — and by the formation of a new plug, which grows out deeper into the derma from the bottom of the fundament of the old hair. At the blind [deep] end of this secondary hair-germ there is then developed from the derma a new papilla, upon which is formed the new hair and its sheaths alongside of and below the old one, in the .manner previously described. When it begins to increase in length, it presses against the old hair lying above it, crowds the latter out of its sheaths, until it falls off, and finally itself takes the place of it. According to this account there would be a certain similarity between the shedding of the hair and that of the teeth, inasmuch as in both cases secondary epithelial processes, from which the new tooth- or hair-papilla begins, arise from the primary fundament, and inasmuch as the new structures by their growth displace the old. 526 EMBRYOLOGY. In addition to the development of hairs from old fundaments, a second method of formation, -whidi one might designate as direct or primary /.is maintained! by many writers (GOETTE, KOLLIKER). It is assumed that even after birth, both in the case of Man and other Mammals, hair-germs are formed diiei-tly from the mucous mem- brane of the epidermis, in the same manner as in the embryo. In how far, at what regions, and up to what age such a direct forma- tion of hair takes place, demands still more detailed and exhaustive investigation. (c) The Nails. A second organ resulting from a coriiification of the epidermis is the nail, which corresponds in a comparative-anatomical way to the claw- and hoof -like structures of other Mammals. In human embryos only seven weeks old there appear proliferations of the epidermis at the ends of the fingers, which are noticeably short and thick, and likewise at the ends of the toes, which are always less developed than the fingers. In consequence of the proliferations there arise from the loose epidermal cells complicated claw-like appendages, which have been described by HENSEN as predecessors of the nails or primitive nails. In somewhat older t mbryos, from the ninth to the twelfth week, ZANDER found the epidermal growth marked off from its surround- ings by a ring-like depression. The growth consists of a single layer of cylindrical cells with large nuclei lying on the side toward the derma and corresponding to the reto Malpighii, of two or three layers of polygonal spinous cells, and of a corneous layer. The territory thus distinguished by a depression and by an altered condition of the cells ZANDER calls the primary basis of the nail (Nagelgrund), and describes it as occupying a greater part of the dorsal, but also a smaller part of the ventral surface of the terminal segment. He infers from this that the nails in Man originally had, like the claws of the lower Vertebrates, a terminal position on the toes and fingers, and that they have secondarily migrated on to the dorsal surface. Thus he explains the fact that the region of the nail is supplied with the ventral nerves of the fingers. GEGENBAUR subscribes to ZANDER'S view of the terminal position of the fundament of the nail, but, supported by the investigations of BOAS, opposes ZANDER'S assumption of a migration of the funda- ment of the nail dorsally. He distinguishes in the development of nails and claws two parts (fig. 293), the dorsally located firm nail- THE ORGANS OF THE OUTER GERM-LAYER. 527 plate (np) and the plantar horn (Sohlenhorn, sh) connected with it ventrally. Of these the latter arises from the smaller ventral surface of the primary basis of the nail. In imguiculate and ungulate Vertebrates it (fig. 294 sh) is developed to a great extent ; in Man it atrophies, and is recognisable only in an exceedingly reduced condition as nail-welt. By this term is meant the welt-like thickening of the epidermis which forms the transition from the bed of the nail to the corrugated skin of the ball of the finger. The nail-plate, on the contrary, is from the beginning exclusively a product of the dorsal surface of the basis of the nail. There is therefore neither in Man nor in other Mammals a dorsal migration of the terminal fundament of the nail, but only a degeneration of nw sh np nw np sh Fig. 293. Fig. 294. Tig. 293. — A, Longitudinal section through the toe of a Cercopithecus through the second finger of Macacus ater. Af oei GEGENBAUR. np. Nail-plate ; sh, plantar horn (Sohlenhorn) ; nw. nail-wall. Tig 294. — Section through a Dog' s toe. After GEGENBAUR. •np, Nail-plate ; sh, plantar horn ; b, ball of toe. its ventral portion, which otherwise furnishes a more complete plantar horn. So far as regards the particular events in the development of the nail-plate, the structure is demonstrable in human embryos four months old as a thin flat layer of cornified, closely united cells on the dorsal surface of the primary basis of the nail or the bed of the nail. It is produced by the mucous layer upon which it im- mediately lies, but continues for a time to be covered by the thin corneous layer that is present at all points of the epidermis. This investment — UNNA'S cponychium—\$ not lost until the fifth month. However, notwithstanding their investment, the nails are easily recognisable some weeks before this from their whiteness, in dis- tinction from the reddish or dark red color of the suriounding skin. B, Longitudinal section 528 EMBRYOLOGY. Owing to the addition of new cells from the mucous membrane, 1 oth from below and from the posterior margin, the nail-plate grows — it becomes thickened and increased in surface extent. It is now pushed forward from behind over the bed of the nail, and at the seventh month its free margin begins to project beyond the latter. With this the nail has acquired essentially the appearance and con- dition which it has in the adult. In new-born infants it possesses a margin which projects far over the ball of the finger, and which — because it was formed at an early embryonic period — is both much thinner and also narrower than the part formed later, which rests on. the bed of the nail. This margin is therefore detached soon after birth. (d) The Glands of the Skin. The glandular structures of the epidermis, which are established by invagination, are of three kinds: sebaceous, sweat-, and udlk- glands. They all arise as proliferations of the mucous layer which grow down as solid pings into the derma, and then undergo further development either according to the tubular or the alveolar type. The sweat-glands and the ear-wax glands are developed on the tubular plan. They begin in the fifth month to penetrate from the mucous membrane into the corium ; in the seventh month they acquire a small lumen, take a winding course in consequence of increased growth in length, and become coiled especially at their deep ends, thereby giving rise to the first fundament of the glomerulus. Sebaceous glands and milk-glands are alveolar structures. The former are either developed directly from the epidermis, as, for example, at the edges of the lips, on the prepuce and on the glans penis, or they are in close connection with the hairs, which is the ordinary condi- tion. In the latter case they are formed as solid thickenings of the outer sheath of the foot of the hair near the orifice of the follicle,, even before the hairs are completely developed (fig. 292 C, Z), td) ; at first they have the form of a flask, then they send out a few lateral buds, which develop club-shaped enlargements at their ends. The glands acquire cavitk s by the fatty degeneration and disintegration of the interior cells, which are eliminated as a secretion. The development of the milk-glands, which are more voluminous organs entrusted with an important fuiicticn and peculiar to the class Mammalia, is of greater interest. Of the numerous works that have appeared concerning them, the comparative-anatomical investigations of GEGENBAUR especially have led to valuable results. THE ORGANS OF THE OUTER GERM-LAYER. 529 df 9 I present at the very beginning of the discussion the following proposition, which is of importance in interpreting the conditions found : each milk-gland in Man is not a simple organ, like an ear- gland or a subinaxillary salivary gland, with a simple outlet, but a great glandular complex. Its earliest fundament has been observed in the human embryo at the end of the second month as a considerable thickening of the epidermis (fig. 295) upon the right, and left sides of the breast. It has arisen as th_e__result of a special proliferation of the mucous layer, which has sunk into the derma in the form of a hemispherical knob (df). But modifications arise afterwards in the corneous layer also, by its becoming thickened and projecting as a corneous plug into the proliferation of the mucous, layer. Ordinarily there is found a small depression (g) at the middle of the whole epithelial fundament. The proliferation of the epi- dermis that first appears is not precisely, as assumed by REIN, the first fundament of the glandular _ parenchyma ; it therefore does not correspond to the epithelial plugs which sink into the derma in the development of the sweat and sebaceous glands, because the further course of develop- ment and especially comparative- anatomical studies show, that by the thickening of the epidermis there is only an early delimitation of a tract of the skin, which is subsequently metamorphosed into the nipple-area and papilla, and from the floor of which the separate milk-producing glands at length sprout forth. The correctness of this view is shown by the following changes : In older embryos the lens-shaped thickening produced by the proliferation of the epidermis has increased at the periphery and has thereby become flattened (fig. 296 df). At the same time it is more sharply defined at the surface, owing to the derma becoming thickened and elevated into a wall (dw) — the cutis-wall. Therefore the whole fundament now has the form of a shallow depression (df) of the skin, for which the name glandular area is very appropriate. For there early grow out from its mucous layer into the derma solid 34 Pig. 295.— Section through the fundament of the milk-gland of a female human embryo 10 cm, long, after Huss. df, Fundament of the glandular area ; g, small depression at its surface. 530 EMBRYOLOGY. buds (dg), just as at other places the sebaceous glands arise from the epidermis. In the seventh month they are already well developed, and radiate out below and laterally from the pit-like depression. Their number increases up to the time of birth, and the larger ones become covered with solid lateral buds (db). Each sprout is the fundament of a milk-producing gland, which opens out on the .glandular area (df) by means of a special orifice ; each is morpho- logically comparable with a sebaceous gland, although its function .has become different. The name glandular area is also a happily selected one •because it presents a point of comparison with the primitive •conditions of the Monotr ernes. For in these animals one does Fig. 296. — Section through the fundament of the milk-gland of a female human e.nbryo 32 cm. long, after Huss. df, Glandular area ; die, gland-wall ; dg, duct of gland ; db, vesicle of gland. not find, as in the higher Mammals, a sharply differentiated single complex of milk-glands, but instead a somewhat depressed area of the skin, even provided with small hairs, over which are distributed single small glands, the secretion of which is licked up with the tongue by the young, which are born in a very immature state. In the remaining Mammals the glands, in the former ca&e •opening separately upon the area, are united into a single organ, which better serves the young in sucking, namely a papilla, [nipple] or teat, which encloses all the outlets of the glands and is •grasped by the mouth of the suckling. In Man their development begins after birth. The glandular area, which is encircled by cutis-wall and which before birth was depressed into a pit, THE ORGANS OF THE OUTER GERM-LAYER. 531 now becomes flattened until it lies in the same niveau with the surrounding skin. It is distinguished from the latter by its redder color, which is due to its greater vascularity and the thinner condition of its epidermis. Then during the first years after birth the middle of the glandular area, together with the outlets (ductus lactiferi), which there open out close to one another, is raised up and becomes the nipple, in the derma of which non- striate muscle-fibres are formed in great numbers ; the remaining part of the area as far as the cutis-wall becomes the areola mammae. The metamorphosis takes place somewhat earlier in the female than in the male. Soon after birth alterations^ take place in the still feebly developed glandular tissue. There occurs a transitory swelling of the pectoral glands accompanied with increased blood-pressure, and it becomes possible to press out of the gland a small quantity of a milky fluid, the so-called witches' milk. According to KOLLIKER its formation is due to the originally solid ducts of the glands acquiring at this time a lumen by the fatty degeneration of the central cells, which are dissolved, and, suspended in a fluid, are discharged from the ducts. According to the investigations of BARPURTH, on the contrary, the so-called witches' milk of infants is the product of a genuine tran- sitory secretion, and is like the real milk of the mother both in its morphological and chemical components. After birth great differences arise between the two sexes in the condition of the milk-glands. Whereas in the male the glandular parenchyma remains stationary in its development, in the female it begins to increase, especially at the time of sexual maturity and still more after the beginning of pregnancy. From the first-formed ducts of the glands there grow out numerous lateral, hollow branches, which become covered with hollow vesicular glands (alveoli) lined with a single layer of cylindrical epithelium. At the same time there are developed in the connective tissue, between the separate lobules of the gland, numerous islands of fat-cells. In consequence the region -at which the complex of milk-glands has been formed swells into A more or less prominent elevation, the mamma. SUMMARY. 1. The development of the hair is inaugurated in human embryos by the growing down of processes of the mucous layer of the epidermis — the hair-germs — into the underlying derma. 533 SMBRTOLOa?. 2. At the deep end of the hair-germ the vascular hair-papills. is begun by a growth of connective tissue. 3. The epithelial hair-gerin is differentiated into : — (a) A young hair, by the cornification of a part of the cells ; (6) An actively growing cell-layer situated between the shaft of the hair and the papilla, — the bulb, — which fur- nishes the material for the growth of the hair ; (c) The outer and the inner sheaths of the root. 4. Around the epithelial part of the fundament of the hair there is formed from the surrounding connective tissue the hair- follicle. 5. The nails in Man and the claws in other Mammals are de- veloped from a dorsal fundament — the nail-plate — and a ventral fundament — the plantar horn. 6. The plantar horn in Man is reduced to the nail-welt. 7. The thin nail-plate which is formed at first is for a time covered with a layer of cornified cells, the eponychium, which in Man is shed in the fifth month. 8. The milk-gland is a complex of alveolar glands. 9. At first there arises a thickening of the mucous layer of the epidermis, which is converted into the glandular area that is after- wards marked off from the surrounding parts by a wall and becomes somewhat depressed. 10. From the bottom of the glandular area there grow forth in great numbers the fundaments of alveolar glands. 11. After birth the glandular area, embracing the excretory ducts of the glands, is elevated above the surface of the skin, and converted into the nipple and the areola mammse. 12. After birth there is a transitory secretion of a small quantity of milk-like fluid — the witches' milk. LITERATURE. (1) Development of the Nervous System. Ahlborn. Ueber die Bedeutung der Zirbeldriise. Zeitschr. f. wiss. Zoologie. Bd. XL. 1884. Altmann, R. Bemerkungen zur Hensen'schen Hypothese von der Nerven- entstehung. Archiv f. Anat. u. Physiol. Pbysiol. Abth. 1885. Balfour. On tbe Development of the Spinal Nerves in Elasmobranch Fishes^ Philos. Trans. Roy. Soc. London. Vol. CLXVI. 1876. LITERATURE. 533 Balfour. On the Spinal Nerves of Ainphioxus. Quart. Jour. Micr. Sci. . Vol. XX. 1880. Beard, J. The System of Branchial Sense Organs and their Associated Ganglia in Ichthyopsida. Quart. Jour. Micr. Sci. Vol. XXVI. 1885. Beard, J. A Contribution to the Morphology and Development of the Nervous System of Vertebrates. Anat. Anzeiger. 1888. Beard, J. The Development of the Peripheral Nervous System of Vertebrates. Quart. Jour. Micr. Sci. Vol. XXIX. 1888. Bedot. Kecherches sur le deVeloppement des nerfs spinaux chez les Tritons. Recueil zool. Suisse. T. I. 1884. Also appeared as Dissertation Geneve 1884. Beraneck, E. Eecherches sur le developpement des nerfs craniens chez les Lezards. Recueil zool. Suisse. T. I. 1884, p. 519. Beraneck, E. Etude sur les replis medullaires du poulet. Recueil zool. Suisse. T. IV. 1888, p. 205. Beraneck, E. Ueber das Parietalauge der Reptilien. Jena. Zeitschr. Bd. XXL 1888. Bidder und KupfFer. Untersuch. iiber das Ruckenmark. Leipzig 1857. Chiarugi, Or. Lo sviluppo dei nervi vago, accessorio, ipoglosso e primi cervicali nei sauropsidi e nei mammiferi. Atti Soc. Toscana di Sci. nat. Pisa. Vol. X. 1889. Dohrn. Ueber die erste Anlage und Entwicklung der motorischen Rucken- marksnerven bei den Selachiern. Mitth. a. d. zool. Station Neapel. Bd. VIII. 1888. Ecker, A. Zur Entwicklungsgeschichte der Furchen und Windungen der Grosshirnhemispharen im Foetus des Menschen. Archiv f. Anthropologie- Bd. III. 1868. Ehlers, E. Die Epiphyse am Gehirn der Plagiostomen. Zeitschr. f. wiss. Zoologie. Bd. XXX. Suppl. 1878, p. 607. Flechsig. Die Leitungsbahnen im Gehirn und Ruckenmark des Menschen. Auf Grund entwicklungsgesch. Untersuchungen dargestellt. Leipzig 1876 Froriep, August. Ueber ein Ganglion des Hypoglossus u. Wirbelanlagen in der Occipitalregion. Archiv f. Anat. u. Physiol. Anat. Abth. 1882. Froriep, August. Ueber Anlagen von Sinnesorganen am Facialis, Glosso- pbaryngeus und Vagus etc. Archiv f. Anat. u. Physiol. Anat. Abth. 1885. Goronowitsch. Studien iiber die Entwicklung des Medullarstranges bei Knochenfischen, nebst Beobachtungen iiber die erste Anlage der Keim- blatter und der Chorda bei Salmoniden. Morphol. Jahrb. Bd. X. 1885, p. 376. Hensen, V. Zur Entwicklung des Nervensystems. Virchow's Archiv. Bd. XXX. 1864. Hensen, V. Ueber die Nerven im Schwanz der Froschlarven. Archiv f. mikr. Anat. Bd. IV. 1868, p. 111. Hensen, V. Beitrag zur Morphologic der Korperformen und des Gehirns des menschlichen Embryos. Archiv f. Anat. u. Entwicklungsg. 1877. Hertwig, Oscar und Richard. Das Nervensystem und die Sinnesorgane der Medusen. Monographisch dargestellt. Leipzig 1878. His. Zur Geschichte des menschlichen Ruckenmarkes und der Nerven- wurzeln. Abhandl. d. rnath.-physik. Cl. d. Kgl Sachs, Gcsellsch. d. Wissensch. Nr. IV. Bd. XIII. 1886. 534 EMBRYOLOGY. His. Ueber die Anfange des peripkerischen Nervensy stems. Archiv f. Anat, u. Entwicklungsg. Jahrg. 1879. His. Ueber das Auftreten der weissen Substanz und der Wurzelfasern am Riickenmark menschlicher Embryonen. Archiv f. Anat. u. Physiol. Anat. Abth. 1883. His. Die Neuroblasten und deren Entstehung im embryonalen Mark. Abhandl. d. math.-physik. 01. d. Kgl. Sachs. Gesellsch. d. Wissensch. Bd. XV. Nr. IV. 1889. His. Die Formentwicklung des menschlichen Vorderhirns vom ersten bis zum Beginn des dritten Monats. Abhandl. d. math.-physik. Cl. d. Kgl. Sachs. Gesellsch. d. Wissensch. Bd. XV. 1889. His. Die Entwicklung der ersten Nervenbahnen beim menschlichen Embryo. Archiv f. Anat. u. Physiol. Anat. Abth. 1887. His, "W., jun. Zur Entwicklungsgeschichte des Acustico-facialis-Gebietes beim Menschen. Archiv f. Anat. u. Physiol. Anat. Abth. 1889. Suppl.- Bd. pp. 1-28. Julin, Ch. De la signification morphologique de 1'epiphyse des vertebres. Bull. sci. du depart, du Nord. Ser. II. T. X. 1888. Kollmann, J. Die Entwicklung der Adergeflechte. Ein Beitrag zur Entwicklungsgesch. des Gehirns. Leipzig 1861. Krause, W. Ueber die Doppelnatur des Ganglion ciliare. Morphol. Jahrb. Bd. VII. 1882, p. 43. Kraushaar, Richard. Die Entwicklung der Hypophysis u. Epiphysis bei Nagethieren. Zeitschr. f. v/iss. Zoologie. Bd. XLI. 1884, p. 79. (Com- plete catalogue of the literature.) Kupffer. Primare Metamerie des Neuralrohrs der Vertebraten. Sitzungsb. d. k. bair. Akad. Munchen. Bd. XV. 1886, p. 469. Lowe, L. Beitrage zur Anatomic und Entwicklung des Nervensystems der Saugethiere u. des Menschen. Berlin 1880. Marshall, Milnes. The Development of the Cranial Nerves in the Chick. Quart. Jour. Micr. Sci. Vol. XVIII. 1878. Marshall, Milnes. On the Early Stages of Development of the Nerves in Birds. Jour. Anat. and Physiol. Vol. XI. 1877. Marshall, Milnes. On the Head Cavities and Associated Nerves of Elasmo- branchs. Quart. Jour. Micr. Sci. Vol. XXI. 1881. Mihalkovics, v. Wirbelsaite und Hirnanhang. Archiv f. mikr. Anat. Bd. XI. 1875. Mihalkovics, v. Entwicklungsgeschichte des Gehirns. Nach Untersuch- ungen an hoheren Wirbelthieren und dem Menschen dargestellt. Leipzig 1877. (Catalogue of the older literature.) Muller, W. Ueber Entwicklung und Bau der Hypophysis und des Processus- infundibuli cerebri. Jena. Zeitschr. Bd. VI. 1871. Onodi. Ueber die Entwicklung des sympath. Nervensystems. Archiv f. mikr. Anat. Bd. XXVI. 1886. Onodi. Ueber die Entwicklung der Spinalganglien und der Nervenwurzeln. Internat. Monatsschr. f. Anat. u. Histol. Bd. I. 1884. Osborn, H. F. The Origin of the Corpus Callosum, a Contribution upon the Cerebral Commissures of the Vertebrata. Morphol. Jahrb. Bd. XII. 1887. Kabl. Bemerkung iiber die Segmentirung des Hirns. Zool. Anzeiger.. Jahrg. VIII. 1885, p. 192. LITERATURE. 535 Rabl-Riickhard. Das gegenseitige Verhaltniss der Chorda, Hypophysis und des mittleren Schadelbalkens bei Haifischembryonen etc. Morphol. Jahrb. Bd. VI. 1880. Rabl-Riickhard. Zur Deutung und Entwicklung des Gehirns der Knochen- fische. Archiv f. Anat. u. Physiol. Anat. Abth. 1882. Kabl-Riickhard. Das Grosshirn der Knochenfische und seine Anbangs- gobilde. Archiv f. Anat. u. Physiol. Anat. Abth. 1883. Rathke, H. Ueber die Entstehung der Glandula pituitaria. Archiv f. Anat. u. Physiol. Bd. V. 1838. Reichert. Der Bau des rnenschlichen Gehirns. Leipzig 1859 and 1861. Sagemehl. Untersuchungen liber die Entwicklung der Spinalnerven. Dorpat 1882. Schmidt, F. Beitrage zur Entwicklungsgeschichte des Gehirns. Zeitschr. f. wiss. Zoologie. Bd. XI. 1862. Schultze, O. Ueber die Entwicklung der Medullarplatte des Froscheies. Verhandl. der phys.-med. Gesellsch. Wiirzburg. N. F. Bd. XXIII. 1889. Schwalbe, G. Das Ganglion oculomotorii. Jena. Zeitschr. Bd. XIII. 1879. Schwalbe, G. Lehrbucb der Neurologic. Erlangen 1880. Spencer, W. Baldwin. On the Presence and Structure of the Pineal Eye in Lacertilia. Quart. Jour. Micr. Sci. Vol. XXVII. 1886. Suchannek. Ein Fall von Persistenz des Hypophysenganges. Anat. Anzeiger. Jahrg. II. Nr. 16. 1887. Tiedemann, Fr. Anatomic und Bildungsgeschichte des Gehirns im Foetus des Menschen. Number g 1816. Wijhe, J. W. v. Ueber die Mesoclermsegmente und die Entwicklung der Nerven des Selachierkopfes. Verhandl. d. koninkl. Akad. d. Wetenschappen Amsterdam. 1882. Deel XXII. (2) Development of the Eye. Angelucci, A. Ueber Eatwicklung und Bau des vorderen Uvealtractus der Vertebraten. Archiv f. mikr. Anat. Bd. XIX. 1881, p. 152, Arnold, Jul. Beitrage zur Entwicklungsgeschichte des Auges. Heidelberg 1874. Babuchin. Beitrage zur Entwicklungsgesch. des Auges. Wiirzburger >vaturwiss. Zeitschr. Bd. IV. 1863, p. 71. Bambeke. Contribution a 1'histoire du developpement de 1'oeil humain. Ann. de la Soc. de med. de Gancl. 1879. Ewetsky, v. Beitrage zur Entwicklungsgeschichte des Auges. Archiv f. Augenheilkunde. Bd. VIII. 1879. Gottschau. Zur Entwickluug der Saugethierlinse. Anat. Anzeiger. Jahrg. L 1886. Keibel, Fr. Zur Entwicklung des Glaskorpers. Archiv f. Anat. u. Physiol. Anat. Abth. 1886. Kessler. Untersuchungen liber die Entwicklung des Auges, angestellt am Hlihnchen und Triton. Dissertation. Dorpat 1871. Kessler. Zur Entwicklung des Auges der Wirbelthiere. Leipzig 1877. Kolliker. Ueber die Entwicklung der Linse. Zeitschr. f. wiss. Zoologie, Bd. VI. 1855. 536 EMBRYOLOGY. Kolliker. Zur Entwicklung des Auges und Geruchsorganes menschlicher Embryonen. Zum Jubilaum der Universitat Zurich. Wurzburg 1883. Koranyi, Alexander. Beitrage zur Entwicklung der Krystalllinse bei den Wirbelthieren. Internat. Monatsschr. f. Anat. u. Histol. Bd. III. 1886. Kupffer. Untersuchungen iiber die Entwicklung des Augenstiels. Sitzungsb. d. Gesellsch. f. Morphol. u. Physiol. Munchen. Bd. I. 1885, p. 174. Iiieberklihn, "N. Ueber das Auge des Wirbelthierembryos. Schriften d. Gesellsch. z. Beford. d. ges. Naturwiss. Marburg. Bd. X. 1872, p. 299. Lieberkuhn, N". Zur Anatomic des embryonalen Auges. Sitzungsb. d. Gesellsch. z. Beford. d. ges. Naturwiss. Marburg. 1877, p. 125. Lieberkiihn, "N. Beitrage zur Anatomic des embryonalen Auges. Arclnv f. Anat. u. Entwicklungsg. Anat. Abth. Jahrg. 1879, pp. 1-29. Manz. Entwicklungsgeschichte des menschlichen Auges. Graefe u. Saemisch. Handbuch d. Augenheilkunde. Bd. II. Leipzig 1875, pp. 1-57, Mihalkovics, v. Ein Beitrag zur ersten Anlage der Augenlinse. Archiv f . mikr. Anat. Bd. XI. 1875. Miiller, W. Ueber die Stammesentwicklung des Sehorgans der Wirbelthiere. Festgabe an Carl Ludwig. Leipzig 1874. B-umschewitsch. Zur Lehre von der Entwicklung des Auges. Schriften d. Gesellsch. d. Naturf. Kiew. Bd. V. Heft 2, 1878, p. 144. (Russian.) Wurzburg, A. Zur Entwicklungsgeschichte des Saugethierauges. In- auguraldissertation der Berliner Universitat. 1876. (3) Development of the Ear. Boettcher, A. Ueber Entwicklung u. Bau des Gehbrlabyrinths. Nach Untersuchungen an Saugethieren. Verhandl. d. Kaiserl. Leop.-Carol. Acad. Bd. XXXV. 1869. Oradenigo, G. Die embryonale Anlage der Gehorknochelchen und des tubo- tympanalen Eaurnes. Centralbl. f. d. med. Wiss. 1886. Nr. 35. Oradenigo, G. Die embryonale Anlage des Mittelohres. Die morpholog. Bedeutung der Gehorknochelchen. Mitth. a. d. embryol. Inst. d. Univ. Wien. Heft 1887, p. 85. Hasse. Die vergleich. Morphologie u. Histologie d. hautigen Gehororgans der Wirbelthiere. Leipzig 1873. Hensen. Zur Morphologie der Schnecke. Zeitschr. f. wiss. Zoologie. Bd. XIII. 1863. His, W. Anatomic menschlicher Embryonen. Leipzig 1880, 18S2, 1885. Hoffmann, C. K. Ueber die Beziehung der ersten Kiementasche zu der Anlage der Tuba Eustachii u. des Cavum tympani. Archiv f. mikr. Anat. Bd. XXIII. 1884. Huschke. Ueber die erste Bildungsgesch. d. Auges u. Ohres beim bebruteten Huhnchen. Oken's Isis, 1831, p. 950. Huschke. Ueber die erste Entwicklung des Auges. Meckel's Archiv. 1 832. Moldeiihauer. Zur Entwicklung des mittleren und ausseren Ohres. Morphol. Jahrb. Bd. III. 1877. Noorden, C. v. Die Entwicklung des Labyrinths bei Knochenfischen. Archiv f. Anat. u. Physiol. Anat Abth. 1883. Reissner. De Auris internae formatione. Imuig.-Diss. Dorpat 1851. LITERATURE. 537 Rosenberg, E. Untersuchungen liber die Entwickl. des Canalis cochlearis d. Saugethiere. Diss. Dorpat 1868. Riidinger Zur Entwicklung der hautigen Bogengange des inneren Ohres. Sitzungsb. d. math.-physik. 01. d. Acad. d. Wissensch. Miinchen. 1888. Tuttle. The Relation of the External Meatus, Tympanum and Eustachian Tube to the First Visceral Cleft. Proceed. Amer. Acad. Arts a. Sci. 1883-4- Urbantschitsch. Ueber die erste Anlage des Mittelohres u. d. Trommelfelles. Mitth. a. d. embryol. Inst. Wien. Heft I. 1877. (4) Development of the Organ of Smell. Blaue, J. Untersuchungen iiber den Bau der Nasenschleimhaut bei Fischen . u. Amphibien etc. Archiv f. Anat. u. Physiol. Anat. Abtb. 1884. Born, G. Die Nasenhb'hlen und der Thranennasengang der Amphibien. Morphol. Jahrb. Bd. II. 1876. Born, G. Die Nasenhohle u.d. Thranennasengang der amnioten Wirbelthiere. Morphol. Jahrb. Bd. V. 1879 u. Bd. VIII. 1883. Diirsy. Zur Entwicklungsgeschichte des Kopfes. Tubingen 1869. Fleischer, R. Beitrage zur Entwicklungsgeschichte des Jacobson'schen Organs u. zur Anat. der Nase. Sitzungsb. d. physic.-med. Soc. Erlangen. 1877. Herzfeld. Ueber das Jacobson'sche Organ des Menschen u. d. Saugethiere. Zool. Jahrbucher. Bd. III. 1888, p. 551. Kolliker, A. Ueber die Jacobson'schen Organe des Menschen. Gratula- tionsschrift d. Wiirzb. Medic. Facultat ftir Rinecker. 1877. Kolliker, A. Zur Entwicklung des Auges und Geruchsorgans menschlicher Embryonen. Festschrift der Schweizerischen Universitat Zurich zur Feier ihres 50jahr. Jubilaums gewidniet. Wwzburg 1883. Kolliker, Th. Ueber das Os intermaxillare des Menschen etc. Nova acta L.-C. Acad. Bd. XLII. p. 325. Halle 1881. Legal. Die Nasenhohle und der Thranennasengang der amnioten Wirbelthiere Morphol. Jahrb. Bd. VIII. 1883. Legal. Zur Entwicklungsgeschichte des Thranennasengangs bei Siiugethieren. Inaug.-Diss. Breslau 1882 (?). Marshall, Milnes. The Morphology of the Vertebrate Olfactory Organ. Quart. Jour. Micr. Sci. Vol. XIX. 1879. (5) Development of the Skin and its Organs. Barfurth. Zur Entwicklung der Milchdruse. Bonn 1882. Boas, J. E. V. Ein Beitrag zur Morphol. der Nagel, Krallen, Hufe und Klauen d. Saugethiere. Morphol. Jahrb. Bd. IX. 1884. Creighton, C. On the Development of the Mamma and of the Mammary Function. Jour. Anat. and Physiol. Vol. XI. 1877, pp. 1-32. Feiertag. Ueber die Bildung der Haare. Inaug.-Diss. Dorpat 1875. Gegenbaur, C. Zur Morphologic des Nagels. Morphol. Jahrb. Bd. X. 1885. Gegenbaur, C. Bemerkungen iiber die Milchdrilsenpapillen cler Saugethiere. Jena. %( itschr. Bd. VII. 1873. Gegenbaur, C. Zur genaueren Kenntniss der Zitzen der Saugethiere. Morphol. Jahrb. Bd. I. 1875. 536 EMBRYOLOGY. Gotte. Zur Morphologic der Haare. Archiv f. mikr. Anat. Bd. IV. 1868,, p. 273. Hensen. Beitrag zur Morphologie der Korperform und des Gehirns des- menscbl. Embryos. Archiv f. Anat. u. Entwicklungsg. Anat. Abth. Jahrg. 1877. Huss, M. Beitrage zur Entwicklung der Milchdriisen bei Menschen und bei Wiederkiiuern. Jena. Zeitschr. Bd. VII. 1873. Klaatsch, Hermann. Zur Morphologie der Saugethier-Zitzen. Morphol. Jahrb. Bd. IX. 1884. Kolliker, A. Zur Entwicklungsgeschichte der aussern Haut. Zeitschr. f . wiss. Zoologie. Bd. II. 1850, p. 67. Kolliker, Th. Beitrage zur Kenntniss der Brustdruse. Verhandl. Wiirzburg. physical.-med. Gesellsch. Bd. XIV. 1879. Langer, C. Ueber den Bau und die Entwicklung der Milchdrusen. Denkschr. d. k. Acad. d. Wissensch. Wien. Bd. III. 1851. Rein, G-. Untersuchungen liber die embryonal e Entwicklungsgeschichte der Milchdriise. Archiv f. mikr. Anat. . Bde. XX. u. XXI. 1882. Reissner. Beitrage zur Kenntniss der Haare des Menschen und der Thiere. Breslau 1854. Toldt, C. Ueber die Altersbestimmung menschlicher Embryonen. Prager med. Wochenschr. 1879. Unna, P. Z. Beitrage zur Histologie und Entwicklungsgeschichte der menschlichen Oberhaut und ihrer Anhangsgebilde. Archiv f. mikr. Anat, Bd. XII. 1876. Zander, R. Die friihesten Stadien der Nagelentwicklung und ihre Beziehungen. zu den Digitalntrven. Avchiv f. Anat. u. Entwicklungsg. Jahrg. 1884. CHAPTER XVII. THE ORGANS OF THE INTERMEDIATE LATER OR MESENCIIYME. THE grounds which made it appear necessary to distinguish in addition to the four epithelial germ-layers a spscial intermediate or iii'-soiidiyrno have already been given in the first part of this text-book. This distinction is also warranted by the further progress of development. For all the various tissues and organs which are derived in many ways from the intermediate layer allow, even subsequently, a recognition of their close relationship. Histo- logically the various kinds of connective substance have been for a long time considered as constituting a single family of tissues. It will be my endeavor to emphasise the relationship of the organs of the intermediate layer, and whatever is characteristic of them from a morphological point of view, more than has been hitherto customary in text-books, and to do the same in a formal THE ORGANS OF THE INTERMEDIATE LAYER OR MESENCHYME. 530 way by embracing these organs in a chapter by themselves and discussing them apart from the organs of the inner, middle, and outer germ-layers. It is the original province of the intermediate layer to form a packing and sustentative substance between the epithelial layers, a fact which stands out with the greatest distinctness particularly in the lower groups, as for example in the Ccelenterates. It is there - fore closely dependent upon the epithelial layers in the matter of its distribution. When the germ-layers are raised up into folds, it penetrates between the layers of the fold as a sustentative lamella : when the germ-layers are folded inwards, it receives the parts that are being differentiated — as for example in the Vertebrates, the neural tube, the masses of the transversely striped muscles, the secretory parenchyma of glands, the optic cups, and the auditory vesicles — and provides them with a special envelopment that adjusts itself to them (the membranes of the brain, the psrimysium, and the connective-tissue substance of the glands). In consequence of this the intermediate layer, in the same proportion as the germ-layers become more fully organised, becomes itself converted into an extra- ordinarily complicated framework, and resolved into the most diver- gent organs, by the formation of evaginations and invagination& and the constricting off of parts. The form of the intermediate layer thus produced is of a second- ary nature, for it is dependent upon the metamorphosis of the germ- layers, with which it is most intimately connected. But in addition, the intermediate layer, owing to its own great power of metamor- phosis, acquires in all higher organisms, particularly in the Verte- brates, an intricate structure, especially in the way of histoloqical differentiation or metamorphosis. In this way it gives rise to a long series of various organs — the cartilaginous and bony skeletal parts, the fasciae, aponeuroses, and tendons, the blood-vessels and lymphatic glands, etc. It is therefore fitting to enter here somewhat more particularly upon a discussion of the principle of histological differentiation, and especially to inquire in what manner it is concerned in the origin of organs differentiated in the mesenchyme. The most primitive and simplest form of mesenchyme is gelatinous tissue. Not only does it predominate in the lower groups of animals, but it is also the first to be developed in all Vertebrates, out of the em- bryonic cells of the intermediate layer, and is here the forerunner and the foundation of all the remaining forms of sustentative substance,^ 540 EMBRYOLOGY. In a homogeneous, soft, quite transparent matrix, which chemically considered contains mucous substance or mucin, and therefore does not swell in warm water or acetic acid, there lie at short and regular intervals from one another numerous cells, which send out in all directions abundantly branched protoplasmic processes and by means -of these are joined to each other in a network. In the lower Vertebrates the gelatinous tissue persists at many places, even when the animals are fully grown ; in Man and other Mammals it early disappears, being converted into two higher forms of connective substance, either into fibrillar connective tissue or into cartilaginous tissue. The first-named arises in the gelatinous matrix by the differentiation of connective-tissue fibres on the part of the cells, which are sometimes close together, sometimes widely scattered. These fibres consist of collagen and upon boiling produce glue. At first sparsely represented, these glue-producing fibres continually increase in volume in older animals. Thus transitional forms, which are designated as foetal or immature connective tissue, lead from gelatinous tissue to mature connective tissue, which consists almost exclusively of fibres and the cells which have produced them. This is capable of a great variety of uses in the organism, according as its fibres cross one another in various directions without order, or are arranged parallel to one another and grouped into special cords and strands. Thus, in connection with other parts derived from the germ- layers, it gives rise to a great variety of organs. In some places it forms the foundation for epithelial layers of great superficial extent ; together with them it produces the integument, composed of epidermis, corium, and subcutaneous connective tissue, and the various mucous and serous membranes ; in others it unites with masses of transversely striped muscle, and arranges itself under the influence of their traction into parallel bundles of tense fibres, furnishing tendons and aponeuroses. Again at other places it takes theform of firm sheets of connective tissue, which ssrve for the separation or enveloping of masses of muscle, the intermuscular ligaments and the fasciae of muscles. -The second metamorphic product of the primary mesen chyme, cartilage, is developed in the following manner : At certain places the embryonic gelatinous tissue acquires as a result of proliferation a greater number of cells, and the cells secrete between them a carti- laginous matrix, chondrin. The part's which have resulted from the process of chondiification exc2ed in rigidity to a considerable •extent the remaining kinds of sustentative substance, the gelatinous THE ORGANS OF THE INTERMEDIATE LAYER OR MESENCHYME. 54)' and the glue-producing intermediate tissue; they are sharply differentiated from their softer surroundings, and become adapted, in consequence of their peculiar physical properties, to the as- sumption of special functions. Cartilage serves in part to keep canals open (cartilage of the larynx and bronchial tree), in part for the protection of vital organs, around which they form a firm envelope (cartilaginous cranium, capsule of the labyrinth, vertebral canal, etc.), and in part for the support of structures projecting from the surface of the body (cartilage of the limbs, branchial rays, etc.). At the same time they afford firm points of attachment for the masses of muscle imbedded in the mesenchyme, neighboring parts of the muscles entering into firm union with them. In this manner there has arisen through histological metamorphosis a differentiated skeletal apparatus, which increases in complication in the same proportion as it acquires more manifold relations with the muscu- lature. Cartilaginous and connective tissues, finally, are capable of a further histological metamorphosis, since the last form of sustenta- tive substance, osseous tissue, is developed from them in connection with the secretion of salts of lime. There are therefore bones that have arisen from a cartilaginous matrix and others from one of con- nective tissue. With the appearance of bone, the skeletal apparatus of Vertebrates has reached its highest perfection. . Even if the mesenchyme has by these processes experienced an extraordinarily high degree of differentiation and a great diversity of form^the histological process3sof differentiation which take place in it aro nevertheless not yet exhausted. In the gelatinous or connective-tissue matrix canals and spaces arise in which blood and lymph move in accomplishing their function of intermediating in the metastasis of the organism, not only conveying the nutritive fluids to the individual organs, but also conducting away both the substances which — owing to the chemical processes in the tissues — have become useless and the superfluous fluids. Out of these first beginnings arises a very complicated organic apparatus. The larger cavities constitute arteries and veins, and acquire peculiarly constructed thick walls, provided with non-striate muscle-cells and elastic fibres, in which three different layers can be dis- tinguished as tunica intima, media, and adventitia. A small part of the blood-passages, especially distinguished by an abundance of muscle-cells, is converted into a propulsive apparatus for the fluid — -the heart. The elementary corpuscles that circulate in the 542 EMBRYOLOGY. currents of the fluid, the blood-cells and lymph-cells, demand renewal the more frequently the more complex the metastasis becomes. This leads to the formation of .special breeding places, as it were, for the lymph-corpuscles. In the course of the lymphatic vessels and spaces there takes place at certain points in the con- nective tissue an especially active proliferation of cells. The substance of the connective-tissue framework assumes here the special modification of reticular or adenoid tissue. The surplus of cells produced enters into the lymphatic current as it sweeps past. According as these lymphoid organs exhibit a simple or a complicated structure, they are distinguished as solitary or aggregated follicles, as lymphatic ganglia and spleen. Finally there are formed at very many places in the intermediate layer, as especially in the whole course of the intestinal canal, organic [non-striate] muscles. After this brief survey of the processes of differentiation in the intermediate layer, which are primarily of an histological nature, I turn to the special history of the development of the organs which arise from it, the blood-vessel and skeletal systems. I. The Development of the Blood-vessel System. The very first fundament of the blood-vessels and the blood has already been treated of in the first part of this text-book. We will therefore here concern ourselves with the special conditions of the vascular system, with the origin of the heart and chief blood vessels, and with the special forms which the circulation presents in the various stages of development, and which are dependent on the formation of the foetal membranes. In this I shall treat separately, both for the heart and for the rest of the vascular system, the first fundamental processes of development and the succeeding altera- tions, from which the ultimate condition is finally evolved. A. The first Developmental Conditions of the Vascular System, (a) Of the Heart. The vascular system of Vertebrates can be referred back to a very simple fundamental form — namely, to two blood-vessel trunks — of which the one runs above and the other below the intestine in the direction of the longitudinal axis of the body. The dorsal tnmk, the THE ORGANS OF THE INTERMEDIATE LAYER OR MESENCHYME. 543 aorta, lies in the attachment of the dorsal mesentery, by means of which the intestine is connected to the vertebral column ; the other trunk, on the contrary, is imbedded in the ventral mesentery, as far, .at least, as such a structure is ever established in the Vertebrates ; it is almost completely metamorphosed into the heart. The latter is therefore nothing else than a peculiarly developed part of a main blood-vessel provided with especially strong muscular walls. In the first fundament of the heart there are two different types to be distinguished, one of which is present in Selachians, Ganoids, Amphibia, and Cyclostomes, the other in Bony Fishes and the higher Vertebrates — Reptiles, Birds, and Mammals. In the description of the first type I select as an example the .^^"SpSV »~*V -^fcr ft |ML4j~ — — « W lh end P vhg ep "Fig. 297. — Cross section through the region of the heart of an embryo of Salamandra maculosa, in which the fourth visceral arch is indicated, after RABL. •d, Epithelium of the intestine ; mn, visceral middle layer ; ep, epidermis ; Ih, anterior part of the body-cavity (pericardio-thoracic cavity) ; end, endocardium ; p, pericardium ; vhg, meso- cardium anterius. CL development of the heart in the Amphibia, concerning which a 'f detailed account has very recently been published by RABL. In Amphibia the heart is established very far forward in the embryonic body, underneath the pharynx or cavity of the head-gut {figs. 297, 298). The embryonic body-cavity (IK) reaches into this region, and in cross sections appears upon both sides of the median plane as a narrow fissure. The lateral halves of the body-cavity are separated from each other by a ventral mesentery (yM, by means of which the under surface of the pharynx iis united with the wall of the body. If we examine the ventral mesentery more closely, we observe that in its middle the two mesodermic layers from which it has been developed separate from each other and allow a small cavity (/<) to appear, the primitive cardiac cavity. This is sur- 544 EMBRYOLOGY. rounded by a single layer of cells, which is afterwards developed' into the endocardium (end).* Outside of the latter the adjacent cells of the middle germ-layer are thickentd ; they furnish the- material out of which the cardiac musculature (the myocardium) and the superficial membrane of the heart (pericardium viscerale) arise. The fundament of the heart is attached above [dorsally] to the pharynx (d) and below to the body-wall by the remnant of the mesentery, which persists as a thin membrane. We designate these two parts as the suspensory ligaments of the heart, as back [dorsal] and front [ventral] cardiac mesenteries (hhg, vhg), or as mesocardium posterius and anterius. At this time there is nothing to be seen of a pericardial sac, unless we should designate as such the anterior [ventral] region of the body- cavity, from which, as the further course of development will show, the pericardium is chiefly derived. In the, second type the heart arises from distinct and widely separated halves, as the con- ditions in the Chick and the Rabbit most distinctly teach. In the Chick the first traces of the fundament may be de- monstrated at an early period, in embryos with four to six primitive segments. They appear here at a time when the various germ-layers are still spread out flat, at a time when the front part of the embryonic fundament first begins to be elevated as the small cephalic protuberance, and the cephalic portion of the intes- tine is still in the first phases of development. As has already been stated, the intestinal cavity in the Chick is developed by the folding together and fusion of the intestinal plates [splanchnopleure]. If one examines carefully the ridge of an intestinal fold in the very process of being formed (fig. 299 A df), one observes that its visceral middle layer is somewhat thickened, composed of large cells, and separated from the entoblast by a space filled with a jelly-like matrix. In the latter there lie a few isolated cells, which subsequently * Relative to the origin of the endothelial sac of the heart, compare the- observations given on page 186. Fig. 298.— Cross section from the same series as that from which fig. 297 was drawn, after RABL. d, Epithelium of the intestine ; vm, visceral, pm, parietal middle layer ; hhg, posterior, vhg, anterior mesocardium ; end, endocardium ; h, cavity of the heart ; Ih, ventral part of the body-cavity ; ep, epidermis. THE ORGANS OF THE INTERMEDIATE LAYER OR MESENCHYME. 545 iklhm^kdf Fig. 299.— Three diagrams to illustrate the formation of the heart in the Chick. n, Xeural tube ; m, mesen- chyma of the head ; d, in- testinal cavity ; df, folds of the intestinal plate [splanchnopleure], in which the endothelial sacs of the heart are established ; h, en- dotheliai sac of the heart ; ch, chorda ; Ih, body- cavity ; ak, outer, ik, inner germ-layer ; mkl, parietal middle layer ; mkz, visceral middle layer, from the thickened portion of which the musculature of the heart is developed ; dn, in- testinal suture, in which the two intestinal folds are fused ; db, part of the en to- blast which has become de- tached from the epithelium of the cephalic portion of the intestine at the intes- tinal suture and lies on the yolk ; + dorsal ineso- cardium ; * ventral meso- cardium. A, rlhe youngest stage shows the infolding of the splanch- nopleure,bymeansof which the cephalic part of the in- testine is formed. In the angles of the intestinal folds the two endothelial sacs of the heart have been esta- blished between the inner germ-layer and the visceral middle layer. S, Somewhat older stage. The two folds (A df) have met in the intestinal suture (dn), so that the two endo- thelial sacs of the heart lie close together in the median plane below the head-gut. C, Oldest stage. The part of the entoblast which lines the head-gut (d) has become separated at the intestinal suture (B dn) from the re- maining part of the ento- blast, which (db) lies upon the yolk, so that the two endothelial sacs of the heart are in contact ; they subsequently fuse. They lie in a cardiac suspensorium formed by the visceral middle layers, the mssocardium, on which one can distinguish an upper [dorsal] and an under part — mesocardiuni superius(+)and inferius (*). By means of this mesocardiuni the primitive body-cavity is temporarily divided into two portions. mi-" 1, hdbh mk* 35 546 EMBRYOLOGY. surround a small cavity, the primitive cardiac cavity (h}. These cells assume more of an endothelial character. While the intestinal folds grow toward each other, the two endothelial tubes become enlarged and push the thickened part of the visceral middle layer before them, so that the latter forms a low, ridge-like elevation into the primitive body-cavity. In the embryos of higher Vertebrates also, just as in the Amphibia, this stretches forward into the embryonic fundament as far as the last visceral arch, and has here received the special name of neck-cavity or parietal cavity. In older embryos (fig. 299 B) the edges of the two folds have met in the median plane, and consequently the two cardiac tubes have moved close together. A process of fusion then takes place between the corresponding parts of the two intestinal folds. First the entoblastic layers fuse, and in this way is produced (fig 299 B) beneath the chorda dorsalis (ck) the cavity of the head-gut (d\ which then detaches itself from the remaining part of the ento blast (fig. 299 C db) ; the latter is left lying on the yolk and becomes the yolk-sac. Under the cavity of the head-gut the two cardiac- sacs have come close together, so that their cavities are separated from each other by their own endothelial walls only. By the break- ing through of these there soon arises from them (h] a single cardiac tube. On the side toward the body-cavity this is covered by the visceral middle layer (mk2), the cells of which are distinguished in the region of the fundament of the heart by their great length and furnish the material for the cardiac musculature, while the inner endothelial membrane becomes only the endocardium. JThe whole fundament of the heart lies, as in the Amphibia, in a ventral mesentery, the upper [dorsal] part of which, extending from the heart to the head-gut (fig. 299 C +), can here also be called the dorsal suspensory of the heart or mesocardium posterius, and the lower [ventral] part (*) mesocardium anterius. In the Chick, when the cardiac tube begins to be elongated and bent into an S- shaped form, the mesocardium anterius quickly disappears. Similar conditions are furnished by cross sections through Rabbit embryos 8 or 9 days old. In the latter the paired fundaments of the heart are indeed developed still earlier and more distinctly than in the Chick, even at a time when the entoderm is still spread out flat and has not yet begun to be infolded. Upon cross sections one sees (fig. 301), in a small region at some distance from the median plane, the splanchnopleure separated from the somatopleure by a small fissure M), which is the front end of the primitive body-cavity. At THE ORGANS OP THE INTERMEDIATE LAYER OR MESENCHYME. 547 this place the visceral middle layer (ahh) is also raised up somewhat from the entoderm (sw), so that it causes a projection into the body- cavity (ph). Here there iff developed between the two layers a small cavity, which is surrounded by an endothelial membrane (ihh\ the primitive cardiac sac. At their first appearance the halves of the heart lie very far apart. They are to be seen both in the very slightly magnified cross section (fig. 300) and also in the surface view of an embryo Rabbit (fig. 302) at the place indicated by h. They Fig. 301. Tigs. 300, 301.— Cross section through the head of an embryo Raboit of the same age as that shown in fig. 302. From KOLLIKER. Fig. 301 is a part of fig. 300 more highiy magnified Fig. 300.— A, h', Fundaments of the heart ; sr, cesophageal groove. Fig. 301.— rf, Dorsal groove ; mp, medullary plate ; >-w, medullary ridge ; h, outer germ-layer ; dd, inner germ-layer ; dd', its chordal thickening ; *p, undivided middle layer ; Jip, parietal, dfp, visceral middle layer ; ph, pericardia! part of the body-cavity ; ahh, muscular wall of the heart ; ihh, endothelial layer of the heart ; mes, lateral undivided part of the middle layer ; sic, intestinal fold, from which the ventral wall of the pharynx is formed. afterwards move toward each other in the same manner as in the Chick by the infolding of the splanchnopleure, and come to lie on the under side of the head-gut, where they fuse and are temporarily attached above and below by means of a dorsal and ventral mesentery. Concerning the processes of development just sketched the question may be raised : What relation do the paired and the unpaired funda- ments of the heart sustain to each other ? It is to be answered to this, that the unpaired fundament of tlie heart, which is present in the Jower Vertebrates, is to be regarded as the original form. The double 648 EMBRYOLOGY. heart-formation, . howev er aberrant it at first sight appears^ can be easily referred back to this. A single cardiac tube cannot be developed in the higher Vertebrates, because at the time of its formation a head- gut does not yet exist, but only the fundament of it is formed in the still flat ento- derm. The parts which will subsequently form the ventral wall of the head-gut, and in which the heart is developed, are still two separated terri- tories; they still lie at some distance from the median plane at the right and at the left. If therefore it is necessary for the heart to be formed at this early period,. it must arise in the separated regions, which by the process of infolding are joined into a single ventral tract. The vessel must arise as two parts, which, like the two intestinal folds,, subsequently fuse. Whether the heart is formed -ft* Fig. 302.— Embryo Rabbit of the ninth day, seen from the dorsal side, after Kor.LiKER. Mag- nified 21 diameters. The axial (stem-) zone (stz) and the parietal zone (pz) are to be distinguished. In the former 8 pairs of primitive segments have been formed at the side of the chorda and neural tube. Area pellucida ; rf, dorsal groove ; vh, fore brain ; ab, optic vesicle ; mh, mid-brain ; hh, hind-brain ; itw, primitive segment ; stz, axial zone ; pz, parietal zone ; h, heart ; ph, pericar- dial part of the body-cavity ; vd, margin of the anterior intestinal portal showing through the overlying structures ; of, fold of the amnion ; vo, vena omphalomesenterica. in one way or the other, in either case it has for a time cp, the form of a straight sac- lying ventral to the head-gut and composed of two tubes one within the other, which are separated by a large space assumably filled with a gela- tinous matrix. The inner, endothelial tube becomes the endocardium ; the outer tube, which is derived from the visceral middle layer, furnishes the foundation for the myocardium and the pericardial membrane that immediately invests the surface of the heart. .53 THE ORGANS OF THE INTERMEDIATE LAYER OR MESENCHYME. 549 (6) The, First Developmental Conditions of the Large Vessels. Vitelline Circulation, Allantoic and Placental Circulation. At both ends, in front and behind, the heart is continuous with the trunks of blood-vessels, which have been established at the same time with it. The anterior or arterial end of the cardiac tube is •elongated into an unpaired vessel, the truncus arteriosus, which con- tinues the forward course under the head-gut, and is divided in the region of the first visceral arch into two arms, which embrace the head-gut on the right and left and ascend within the arch to the -dorsal surface of the embryo. Here they bend around and run back- ward in the longitudinal axis of the body to the tail-end. These two vessels are the primitive aortce (figs. 107, 116 ao)-} they take their course on either side of the chorda dorsalis, above the entoderm a,nd below the primitive segments. They give off lateral branches, among which the arterice omphalomesentericce are in the Amniota -distinguished by their great size. These betake themselves to the yolk-sac and conduct the greatest portion of the blood from the two primitive aortas into the area vasculosa, where it goes through the vitelline circulation. / In the Chick, the conditions of which form the basis of the following account (fig. 303), the two vitelline arteries (R.Of.A, L.Of.A] quit the aor tee at some distance from their tail- ends, and pass out laterally jq^ from the embryonic fundament between entoderm and visceral middle layer into the area pellucida, traverse the latter, and distribute them-. selves in the vascular area. They are here resolved into a fine net- work of vessels, which lie, as a cross section (fig. 116) shows, in the mesenchyme between the entoderm and the visceral middle layer, and which are sharply bounded at their outer edge (toward the vitelline area) by a large marginal vessel (fig. 303 &T7), the sinus ter- minalis. The latter forms a ring which is everywhere closed, with the exception of a small region which lies in front, at the place where the anterior amniotic sheath has been developed. From the vascular area the blood is collected into several large venous trunks, by means of which it is conducted back to the heart. Jrom the front part of the marginal sinus it returns in the two vence vitellince anteriores, which run in a straight line from in front backwards and also receive lateral branches from the vascular network. From the hind part of the sinus terminalis the blood is taken up by the venae vitellinse posteriores, of which the one of the left side is larger than the one of the right; the latter afterwards 550 EMBRYOLOGY. degenerates more and more. From the sides likewise there come still larger collecting vessels, the venae vitellinse laterals. All the vitelline veins of either side now unite in the middle of the embryonic body to form a single large' trunk, the vena omphalo- Vitelline area. Fig. 303.— Diagram of the vascular system of the yolk-sac at the end of the third day of incubation, after BALFOUR. The whole blastoderm has been removed from the egg and is represented as seen from below. Hence what is really at the right appeirs at the left, and vice v(rsd. The part of the area opaca in which the close vascular network has been formed is sharply terminated at its periphery by the sinus terminalis, and forn.s the vas.ular art-a ; outside of the latter lies the vitelline area. The immediate neighborhood of the embryo is free from a vascular net- work, and now, as previously, is distinguished by the name area pellucida. H, Heait; AA, aoitic arches; Ao, dorsal aorta; L.Of.A, left, R.Of.A, right vitelline artery; S. T, sinus terminalis ; L.Of, left, R.Of, right vite line vein ; S. V, sinus venosus ; D.C, ductrs Cuvieii ; S.Ca.V, superior, V.Co, inferior cardinal vein. The veins are left in outline; the ai-terieB are black. mesenterica (R.Of and L.Of), which enters the posterior end of the- heart (//). The motion of the blood begins to be visible in the case of the Chick as early as the secor.d day of incubation. At this time the blood is still a clear fluid, which contains only few formed THE ORGANS OF THE INTERMEDIATE LAYER OR MESENCHYME. 551 components. For the most of the blood-corpuscles still continue to lie in groups on the walls of the tubes, where they constitute the previously described blood-islands (fig. 114), which cause the red- besprinkled appearance of the vascular area. The contractions of the heart, by which the blood is set in motion, are at first slow and then become more and more rapid. On the average, according to PREYER, the strokes then amount to 130 — 150 per minute. How- ever, the frequency of pulsations is largely dependent upon external influences; it increases with the elevation of the temperature of incubation and diminishes at every depression of it, as well as when the egg is opened for study. At the time when the heart begins to pulsate, no muscle-nbrillae have been demonstrated in the myocar- dium ; from this results the interesting fact that purely proto- plasmic, still undifferentiated cells are in a condition to make strong rhythmical contractions. At the end of the third or fourth day the vitelline circulation in the Chick is at its highest development ; it has undergone aome slight changes. We find instead of a single vascular network a double one, an arterial and a venous. The arterial network, which receives the blood from the vitelline arteries, lies deeper, nearer to the yolk, while the venous spreads itself out above the former and is adjacent to the visceral middle layer. The circulating blood is distinguished by the abundance of its blood-corpuscles, the blood- islands having entirely disappeared. The function of the vitelline circulation is twofold. First it serves to provide the blood with oxygen, opportunity for acquiring which is afforded by the whole vascular network being spread out at the surface of the egg. Secondly it serves to bring nutritive substances to the embryo. The yolk-elements below the entoblast are disassociated, liquefied, and taken up into the blood-vessels, by which they are carried to the embryo, where they serve as nutrition for the rapidly dividing cells. Thus far the embryonic body increases in size at the expense of the yolk-mateiial in the yolk- sac, which becomes liquefied and absorbed. The system of vitelline bloc d- vessels in Mammals agrees in general with that of the Chick, and is distinguished from the latter only in some unimportant points, which do not need to be discussed. How- ever, this question certainly arises • What signification has a vitelline circulation in Mammals (fig. 134 ds) in which the egg is furnished with only a small amount of yolk-material ? Two tilings are here to be kept in mind ; first, that the eggs of 562 EMBRYOLOGY. Mammals were originally provided with abundant yolk -material, like those of Reptiles (compare p. 222), and, secondly, that the blasto- dermic vesicle, which arises after the process of cleavage, becomes greatly distended by the accumulation within it of a fluid very rich in albumen, furnished by the walls of the uterus. Out of this vesicle likewise the vitelline blood-vessels undoubtedly take up nutritive material and convey it to the embryo, until a more ample nutritior is provided by means of the placenta. In addition to the vitelline blood-vessels there arises in the higher Vertebrates a second system of vessels, which is distributed in the fatal membranes outside the embryo and for a time is more developed than the remaining vessels of the embryo. It serves for the allantoic circulation of Birds and Reptiles and the placental circu- lation of Mammals. When in the Chick the allaiitois (PI. I., fig. 5 al) is evaginated from the front [ventral] wall of the hind-gut, and as an ever increasing sac soon grows out of the body-cavity through the dermal umbilicus into the cceloin of the blastodermic vesicle between the serosa and the yolk-sac, there appear in its walls two blood-vessels, which grow forth from the ends of the two primitive aortse — the *' umbilical -vessels, or arteries unibilicales. The blood is again collected from the fine capillary network, into which these vessels have been resolved, into the two umbilical veins (venae umbilicales), which, after having arrived at the navel, pass on to the two Cuvierian ducts (see p. 577) and pour their blood into these near the entrance of the latter into the sinus venosus. The terminal part of the right vein soon atrophies, whereas the left receives the lateral branches of the right side and is correspondingly developed into a larger trunk. This now also loses its original connection with the (luctus C-uvieri, since it effects with the left lunatic vein (vena hepatica revehens) an anastomosis, which continually becomes larger and finally carries the whole stream of blood. Together with the left hepatic vein the left umbilical vein then empties directly into the sinus venosus at the posterior margin of the liver (HOCHSTETTER). The umbilical and vitelline veins undergo opposite changes in calibre during development : while the vitelline circulation is well developed, the umbilical veins are inconspicuous stems ; afterwards, however, with the increase in the size of the allantois they enlarge, whereas the venae omphalomesentericae undergo degeneration and in the same proportion as the yolk-sac by the absorption of the yolk becomes smaller and loses in significance. THE ORGANS OF THE INTERMEDIATE LAYER OR MESENCHYME. 553 So far as regards the purpose of the umbilical circulation, it subserves in Reptiles and Birds ihe function of respiration. For the allantois, when it has become larger, in the Chick for example, applies itself closely to the serosa and spreads itself out in the vicinity of the air-chamber and underneath the shell, so that the blood circulating in it can enter into an exchange of gases with the atmospheric air. It loses its importance for respiration in the egg only at the moment when the Chick with its beak breaks through ,the surrounding embryonic membranes, and breathes directly the air contained in the air-chamber. For the conditions of the circulation are now altered throughout the whole body, since with the begin- ning of the process of respiration the lungs are in a condition to take up a greater quantity of blood, resulting in a degeneration of the umbilical vessels (compare also p. 584). The umbilical or placental circulation in Mammals (fig. 139 Al) plays a still more important role; for here the two umbilical arteries convey the blood to the placenta. After the blood has been laden in this organ with oxygen and nutritive substances, it flows back again to the teart, at first through two, afterwards through a single umbilical vein (p. 584). B. The further Development of the Vascular System up to the Mature Condition. {a) The Metamorphosis of the Tubular Heart into a Heart with Chamber's. As has been shown in a preceding section, the heart of a Verte- brate originally has for a short time the form of a straight sac, which sends off at its anterior end the two primitive aortic arches, while it receives at its posterior end the two omphalomesenteric veins. The sac lies far forward immediately behind the head on the ventral side of the neck (fig. 304 h), in a prolongation of the body-cavity (the parietal or cervical cavity). It is here attached by means of a mesentery of only brief duration, which stretches from the alimentary canal to the ventral wall of the throat, and which is divided by the card in c sac itself into an upper [dorsal] and an under part, or mesocardium posterius and anterius. During the first period of embryonic development the heart is distinguished by a very considerable growth, especially in the longi- tudinal direction ; consequently it soon ceases to find the necessary 554 EMBRYOLOGY. room for itself as a straight sac, and is therefore compelled to bend itself into an S-shaped loop (fig. 304). It then takes such a position in the neck that one of the bends of the S, which receives the vitelline veins or, let us say briefly, the venous portion, comes to lie behind and at the left ; the other or arterial portion, which sends off the aortic arches, in front and at the right (fig. 305). But this initial position is soon altered (figs. 305, 313) by the two curves of the S assuming another relation to each other. The venous portion moves head wards, the arterial, on the contrary, in the opposite direc- tion, until both lie approximately in the same transverse plane. At the- same time they become turned around the longitudinal axis of the embryo, the venous loop moving dorsally, the arterial, on the contrary, ventrally. Seen from in front [ventral aspect] one hides the other, so that it is only in a side view that the S-shaped cur- vature of the cardiac sac is distinctly recognisable. By the increase in the size of this viscus the anterior part of the body- i-avity is already greatly dis-.tended, and becomes still more so in later stages, when there is produced a very thin- walled elevation, that projects out to a great distance (figs. 157 h, 314). Inasmuch as the heart completely fills the cavity, and is covered in by only the thin, transparent, and closely applied wall of the trunk, — the membrana reunions inferior of RATHKE, — it appears as though at this time the heart wore 1< cated entirely outsido, of tho body of tho embryo. After the completion of the twisting, there is effected a division of the S-shaped sac into several successive compartments (figs. 306, 308). The venous portion, which has become broader, and the arterial part are separated from each other by a deep constriction (ok) and can now be distinguished as atrium (vh) and ventricle, while the constricted region between the two may be indicated, by a designation introduced GiS-ffSrtt^ ' rm ' us Fig 3C4.--Kead of a Chick incubated 58 hours, seen from the dorsal face, after M HALKOVICS. Mag- nified 40 diame.ers. The brain is divided into 4 vesicles: pvh, primary fore-brain vesicle ; mh, mid-brain vesicle ; kh, hind- brain vesicle ; nh, after-brain vesicle; au, optic vesicle ; h, heart (seen through the last brain- vesicle) ; vo, vera omphalomesen- terica ; iis, primitive segment ; rm,- spiral cord ; x. anterior wall of brain, which is evagir.a'ed to form the cerebrum. THE ORGANS OF THE INTERMEDIATE LAYER OR MESE£CHYME. 5551 by HALLER, as auricular canal (ok). The atrium thereby acquires a striking form, since its two lateral walls develop large out-pocketings- (ho\ the auricles of the heart (auriculae cordis) ; the free edges of the latter, which in addition soon acquire notches, are turned for- ward, and subsequently enfold more and more the arterial part of the heart, the truncus arteriosus (To), and a part of the surface of the ventricle. The auricular canal (fig. 308 ok) is in embryos a well-distinguished narrowed place in the cardiac tube. Owing to the great flattening of its endothelial tube in the sagittal direction, — its walls almost — ok Fig. 306. Fig. 305.— Heart, of a hum\n embryo, the body of which was 2'15 mm. long (eiub.yo Lg), after H s. [Compare fig. 313.] K, Ventricle ; Tn, trnncus arteriosus ; V, venous end of the S-shapeJ cardiac sac. Fig. 308.- Heart of a human embryo that was 4 3 mm. long, neck measurement (emb .yo BL , after H s. k, Ventricle ; Ta, truncus arieriosus ; ok, caralis auricu'aris ; vh} atrium with the heart-auricles ho (auriculae cordis). coming into contact, — the passage between atrium and ventricle is reduced to a narrow transverse fissure. It is here that the atrio- ventricular valves are afterwards developed. The fundament of the ventricle at first presents the form of a curved tube (figs. 305, 306 k), which however soon changes its form. For at a very early period there is observable on its anterior [ventral] and posterior surfaces a shallow furrow running from above down- ward, the sulcus interventricularis (fig. 307 si), which allows a left and a right half of the ventricle to be distinguished externally. The latter is the narrower, and is continued upward into the truncus arteriosus (Ta), the beginning of which is somewhat enlarged and A 556 EMBRYOLOGY. designated as bulbus. Between bulbus and ventricle lies a place that is only slightly constricted, called the f return Halleri; it was recognised even by the older anatomists, then remained for a time little regarded, and now has been again described as noteworthy by His. For it marks the place at which subsequently the semilunar valves are established. During the externally visible changes of form, some alterations are also progressing in the finer structure of the walls of the heart. As previously remarked, the fundament of the heart consists in the beginning of two sacs, one within the other — an inner endothelial tube lined with flat cells, and an outer muscular sac consisting of cells with abundant protoplasm and derived from the middle germ-layer. The two are completely sepa- rated from each other by a considerable space, which is probably filled with gela- tinous substance. The endothelial tube is in general a tolerably faithful copy of the muscular sac, yet the narrower and wider regions are more sharply marked off from one an- other in the former than in the latter ; " as regards its form, it sustains such a relation to the whole heart as it would if it were a greatly shrivelled, internal cast of it " (His). In the muscular sac distinct traces of muscle-fibres can be recog- nised even at the time when the S-shaped curvature makes its appearance. At later stages in the development differences appear between atrium and ventricle. In the atrium the muscular wall is uniformly thickened into a compact plate, with the inside of which the endothelial tube is in immediate contact. In the ventricle, on the contrary, there occurs a loosening, as it were, of the muscular wall. There are formed numerous small trabeculse of muscular cells, which project into the previously mentioned space between the two sacs and become united to one another, forming a large-meshed network (fig. 31 1 A). The endothelial tube of the heart, by forming out-pocketing*, Pig. 307.— Heart of a human embryo of the fifth week, after His. rk, Right, Ik, left ventricle ; si, sulcus interventricu- laris ; Ta, truncus ar^eriosus ; Lho, left, rho, right auricle of the heart. THE ORGANS OF THE INTERMEDIATE LAYER OR MESENCHYME. 557 soon comes into intimate contact with the trabeculse, and envelops each one of them with a special covering (His). Thus there arise in the spongy wall of the ventricle numerous spaces lined with endotl-.o'ium, which toward the surface of the heart end blindly, but which communicate with the central cavity and like this receive into them the stream of blood. The embryonic heart of Man and Mammals resembles in its first condition — that which has been described up to this point — the heart of the lowest Vertebrates, the Fishes. In the former as in the latter it consists of a region, the atrium, which receives the venous blood from the body, and of another, the ventricle, which drives the blood into the arterial vessels. Corresponding to this condition of the heart, the whole circulation in embryos of this stage and in Fishes is still a simple and a single one. This becomes changed in the evolution of Vertebrates, as in the embryonic life of the individual, with the development of the lungs, upon the appearance of which a doubling of the heart and of the 'blood-circulation is introduced. The cause of such a change is clear, from the topographical relation of the two lungs to the heart, the former arising in the immediate vicinity of the heart by evagination of the fore-gut (fig. 314 Ig). The lungs therefore receive their blood from an arterial stem lying very near the heart, from the fifth [sixth] pair of aortic arches that arise from the truncus arteriosus. Similarly they give back again the venous pulmonary blood directly to the heart through short stems, the pulmonary veins, which, originally united into a single collecting trunk (BoRN, ROSE), open into the atrium at the left of the great venous trunks. Therefore the blood that flows directly out of the heart into the lungs also flows directly back again to the heart. Herein is furnished the prerequisite for a double circulation. This comes into existence when the pulmonary and the body currents are separated from each other by means of partitions throughout the short course of the vascular system which both traverse in common (viz., atrium, ventricle, and truncus arteriosus). The process of separation begins in the vertebrate phylum with the Dipnoi and Amphibia, in which pulmonary respiration appears for the first time and supplants bronchial respiration. In the amniotic Vertebrates it is accomplished during their embryonic development. Therefore we now have to follow out further the manner in which, in the case of Mammals and especially of Man, according to the recent investigations of His, BORN, and BOSE, the partitions are formed — how atrium and ventricle are each divided into right and 558 EMBRYOLOGY. left compartments, and the truncus arteriosus into arteria pul- monalis and aorta, and how in this way the heart attains its definite form. The partitions arise independently in each of the three divisions of the heart mentioned. Let us first take into consideration the atrium, which is for a time the largest and most capacious region of the cardiac sac (fig. 308). In Man a separation into left and right halves (Iv and rv) is observable even in the fourth week, since there is then formed on its hinder [dorsal] and upper wall a perpendicular projection inward, the first trace of the atrial partition (vs} or septum atriorum. The halves are even now distinguished by the fact that they receive different venous trunks. The vitel- line and umbilical veins. as well as the Cuvierian ducts to be discussed later, empty their blood into the Tig. 3' 8.— Heart of a human embryo 10 mm. long, neck measurement ; posterior [dorsal] half of the heart, the front walls of which have been removed. After H.s. ks, Partition of the ventricle ; Ik, left, rk, right ven- tricle ; ok, auricular canal ; Iv, left, rv, right atrium ; sr, mouth of the sinus reunions ; vs, par- tition of the atrium (atrial crescent, His ; septum primum, BORN); * Eustachian valve ; Ps seplum spurium . right compartment, not directly, however, and by means of separate orifices, but after they have united with one another in the vicinity of the heart to form a large venous sinus (sr] — the sinus venosus or s. reuniens. This is imme- diately adjacent to the atrium and communicates with it by means of a large opening in its posterior [dorsal] wall, which is flanked on the right and on the left by a large venous valve (*). Only one small vessel, which traverses the musculature (f the heart obliquely, opf-ns, near the at rial partition, into the left compartment; it is the previously mentioned unpaired pulmonary vein, which is formed immediately outside the atrium by the union of four branches, two of which come from each of the two wings of the lung now being established. In the further course of development the atrial partition grows THE ORGANS OF THE INTERMEDIATE LAYER OR MESENCHYME. 559 from above downward until it reaches the middle of the atrial c.inul (fig. 309 si). In this manner two completely separated atria would Lave come into existence at a very early period, if there had not been formed in the upper part of the partition, while it was .still growing downward, an opening, the future foramen ovale,"^ which maintains a connection between the two chambers (fig. 309) up to the time of birth. The opening lias arisen either from the septum atriorum having become thin and having broken through at a certain region, or from its having been incomplete at this place from the very beginning, as is the case with the Chick for example, where it is traversed by numerous small orifices. Afterwards the foramen ovale, adapting itself to the conditions of the circulation existing at the time, becomes^ still larger. The downgrowth of the atrial parti- tion has, moreover, the immediate result of separating the au- ricular canal into the left and right atrio- ventricular orifices (compare fig. 308 ok with fig. 309). The auricular canal, even very soon after its formation, undergoes important alterations both from without and within. At first visible from the out- side (fig. 308 ok), it afterwards disappears from view (fig. 309) by being in a manner overgrown on all sides by the ventricle, and thereby incorporated in its walls, which enlarge upward and, in consequence of a vigorous growth of the musculature, acquire con- siderable thickness. The opening of the atrial canal into the ven- tricle, or the foramen atrioventriculare commune (fig. 310 A F.av.c), now has the form of a fissure extending from left to right, which is bounded on either side by two ridge-like lips (o.ek and u.ek) — the atrioventricular lips of LINDES, or the endothelial cushions of Fig. 309.— Posterior [dorsal] half of the heart of a human embryo of the fifth week, cut open, after His. ks, Ventricular partition ; Ik, lef c, rk, right ventricle ; si, lower [posterior] part of the atrial partition (septum intermedium, His); Iv, left, rv, right atrium; sr, mouth of the sinus reuniens ; vs, a'.i'ial partition (atrial crescent, His ; septum secundum, BORX) ; Ps, septiim spurium ; * Eusiachian valve. 560 EMBRYOLOGY. SCHMIDT. The ridges have arisen from a growth of the endocardium., and consist of a gelatinous connective substance and an endothelial investment. The atrial partition, when it has grown down to the auricular canal, soon fuses along its free lower margin with these lips (fig. 309 si) ; the auricular canal is thereby divided into a left and a right atrioventricular opening, — ostinm atrioventriculare sinistrum and dextrum (fig. 310 B F.av.s and F.av.d\ — and at the same time both the dorsal and ventral endocardial ridges, which originally bound the opening, are divided in the middle (o.ek and u.ek). The dorsal components soon fuse with the corresponding pieces of the opposite [ventral] side, and thus there arise at the lower margin of the atrial partition (fig. 309 si) two new ridges, — one of which projects into the left, the other into the right atrioventricular opening, — which furnish the foundation of the median cuspidate valves. The development of the atrial partition and the division of the auricular canal into the two atrioventricular openings are closely related processes, the former being the cause of the latter. This is clearly proved by pathological -anatomical conditions of arrested development of the heart. In all cases in which the formation of the atrial partition has been for any reason whatever interrupted and the lower part of it has been altogether wanting, there has always been only one atrioventricular opening (an ostium venosum commune) present (ARNOLD). Before we progress further in the history of the development of the atrium, we must add an account of the metamorphoses which have taken place meanwhile in the territory of the ventricle and truncus arteriosus. The ventricle begins to acquire its partition, not much Liter than the atrium. By the end of the first month its musculature has become considerably thickened (fig. 311 A). Muscular trabeculse have arisen, which project far into the interior of the chamber and are joined to one another, so as to constitute a spongy tissue, the numerous fissures in which are continuous with the narrowed cavity of the heart and likewise allow the current of the blood to pass through them. At one place the musculature is especially thickened and forms a crescent-shaped fold projecting inward, the fundament of the ventricular partition (septum ventriculoram) (figs. 30S, 309, 310 ks). This takes its origin from the lower :m separated off The impulse* to separation is furnished by the Cuvierian ducts (fig. 314 dc). One portion of the latter runs down from the dors urn, where it arises by the confluence of the jugular and cardinal veins, along the lateral walls of the trunk to the transverse septum (fig. 314 dc) ; it thereby Fig. 314.- Sagittal reconstruction of a human embryo 5 mm. long, neck measurement (embryo R, His), to elucidate the development of the pericardio-thoracic cavity and the diaphragm, after His. ab, Bulbus arteriosus ; brh, thoracic cavity (recessus parietalis, His); hh, pericardial cavity; dc, ductus Cuvicri ; dv, vena omphalomesenterica ; nv, umbilical vein ; -cca, cardinal vein ; vj, jugular vein ; Ig, lung ; z + i, fundament of the diaphragm and liver ; ^^k, mandible. crowds the pleura into the pericardio-thoracic cavity, and in this manner produces the pleuro-pericardial fold. Since the latter is carried farther and farther inward, it continues to narrow the com- munication between the pericardial cavity (hb) and the two pleural cavities (brft) • finally, it cuts off the communication entirely, when its free edge has grown [medianwards] as far as, and has fused with, the mediastinum pcsterius, in which the oesophagus lies. By this migration of the Cuvierian ducts is also explained the position of the superior vena cava, which later opens into the atrium from above, for it is derived from the Cuvierian duct. Originally located in THE ORGANS OF THE INTERMEDIATE LAYER OR MESENCHYME. 509 the lateral wall of the trunk, its terminal part is afterwards enclosed in the mediastinum. After the closure of the pericardial sac, the narrow, tubular thoracic cavities (fig. 314 brh) continue for a time to remain in communication behind with the abdominal cavity. The fundaments of the lungs (lg) meantime grow farther into them, and their tips finally come in contact with the upper surface of the liver, which also has now become larger. Then a closure is effected at these places also. From the lateral and posterior walls of the trunk project folds (the pillars of USKOW), which fuse with the septum transversum, and thus form the dorsal part of the diaphragm. One can therefore distinguish a ventral older part and a dorsal younger one. As GEGENBAUR points out, this explains the course o£ the phrenic nerve, which runs in front of [ventral to] the heart and lungs and approaches the diaphragm from in front. Occasionally the fusion of the dorsal and ventral fundaments is interrupted on one side. The consequence of such arrested develop- ment is a diaphragmatic hernia — i.e., a permanent connection between .abdominal and thoracic cavities by means of a hernial orifice, through which loops of the intestine can pass into the thoracic chamber. When the four large serous spaces of the body have been com- pletely shut off from one another, the individual organs must still undergo extensive alterations of position, in order to attain their ultimate condition. The pericardial sac at first takes up the whole ventral side of the breast, and over a large area is connected with the anterior wall of the thorax and with the upper wall of the diaphragm. Moreover, the latter is united with the liver along its whole under surface. The lungs lie hidden in narrow tubes at the dorsal side of the embryo. There are two factors that come into the account in this con- nection (fig. 315). With the increase in the extent of the lungs (lg)t the thoracic cavities (pl.p) extend farther vent rally, and thereby detach the wall of the pericardial sac (pc), or the pericardium, on the one h»-nd from the lateral and anterior walls of the thorax, and on the other from the surface of the diaphragm. Thus the heart (ht), with its pericardial sac. is disp'aced step by step toward the median plane, where, together with the large blood-vessels (ao), the oeso- phagus (o-l), and the bronchial tubes, it helps to form a partition — the mediastinum — between the greatly enlarged thoracic cavities. In front the pericardial sac then remains in contact with the wall of 570 EMBRYOLOGY. tha thorax (st) and below with the diaphragm for a little distance- only. The second factor is the separation of the liver from the jyrimari^ diaphragm, with which it was united to form the septum transversum^ This takes place as follows : At the margin of the liver the peritoneum r which originally covered only its under surface, grows over on to its upper surface, separating it from the primary diaphragm. A connection is retained near the wall of the trunk only. Thus is. explained the development of the liy amentum coronarium hepatis*. Fig. 315. — Cross section through an advanced embryo of a Rabbit, to show how the pericardial cavity becomes surrounded by the pleural cavities, from BALFOUR. ht, Heart ; pc, pericardial cavity ; pl.p, thoracic or pleural cavity ; Ig, lung ; al, alimentary canal ; ao, dorsal aorta ; ch, chorda ; rp, rib ; st, sternum ; sp.c, spinal cord. which was disregarded in the section which treated of the ligamentous- supports of the liver (p. 330). The diaphragm finally acquires its permanent condition by the ingrowth of muscles from the wall of the trunk into the connective- tissue lamella. (c) The Metamorphoses of the Arterial System. The development of the large arterial trunks lying in the vicinity of the heart is of great interest from a comparative-anatomical point of view. As in all Vertebrates at least five pairs of visceral arches- THE ORGANS OF THE INTERMEDIATE LAYER OR MESENCHYME. 571 are established on the two sides of the fore-gut (permanently in the gill-breathing Fishes, Dipnoi, and a part of the Amphibia, transitorily in the higher Vertebrates), so also there are developed at the corresponding places on the part of the vascular system five pairs of vascular arches* (fig. 316 1*5). They take their origin from the trillions arteriosus (figs. 316, 317), which runs forward under the fore-gut, then follow along the visceral arches up to the dorsal surface of the embryo, and here unite on either side of the vertebral column into longitudinal vessels, the_bwo_£rimitive aorta* (fig. 317 ad). On this account they are called aortic arches, but they are more appropriately designated as visceral-arch vessels. In the Vertebrates that breathe by means of gills, the vessels of the visceral arches become of importance in the process of respiration, and early lose their simple structure. From their ventral initial portions there arise numerous lateral branches run- ning to the branchial lamella}, which have arisen in large numbers from the mucous membrane investing the visceral arches ; here they are resolved into fine capillary networks. From these the blood is re-collected into venous branches, which open into the upper end of the visceral-arch vessels. The larger the ventral and dorsal lateral branches, the more incon- spicuous dees the middle part of the vessel of the visceral arch become. At length it has separated into an initial part, the branchial artery, which is distributed to the branchial lamellae in numerous branches, and an upper part, the branchial vein, into which the blood is re-collected. The two are connected with each other by means of the close network only, which, from its superficial position in the mucous membrane, presents a suitable condition for the removal of the gases from the blood. Since in the AiL.r>iota there are no branchial lamella produced, branchial arteries and veins also fail to be developed, the vessels of * [The existence of six pairs of vascular arches has recently been shown to be the typical condition, the newly discovered pair, situated between the fourth and fifth pairs of RATHKE'S scheme ''fig 316). being of short duration in Amniota.] fig. 316. — Diagram of the arrange- ment of the vessels of the visceral arches from an embryo of an amniotic Vertebrate. 1 — 5, First to fifth aortic arches ; ad, aorta dorsal is ; ci, carotis intern u ; ce, carotis externa ; v, vertebralis , s, subclavia ; p, pulmonalis. 372 EBIBRYOLOGY. the visceral arches retaining their original simple condition. But they are in part of only short duration; they soon suffer, by the complete degeneration of extensive portions, a profound metamor- phosis, which is effected in a somewhat different manner in Reptiles, Birds, and Mammals. An exposition of the changes in the case of Man only will be given here. In human embryos only a few millimetres long, the truncus arteriosus, which emerges from the still single cardiac tube, is divided in the vicinity of the first visceral arch into a left and a right branch, which surround the pharynx, and are continuous above with the two primitive aortse. It is the first pair of aortic arches. In Fig. 317.— Development of the large arterial trunks, represjntedfrom embryos of a Lizard (A), the Chick (B), and the Pig (C), after RATHKE. The first two pairs of arterial arches have in a'l cases disappeared. In A an 1 B the thiiv, fourth, and fifth pairs are still fully preserve.! ; in C o-.i'y the two latter are s'ill coniple e. p, Pulmonary ar;ery arising from the fifth arch, but s.ill joiue.l to the dorsal aor;a by n.fu: B <>f a ductus Botalli ; c, external, c', internal carotid ; ad, dorsal aorta ; a, atrium ; v, ventricle J n, nasal pit ; m, fundament of the anterior limb. only slightly older embryos their number is rapidly increased by the formation of new connections between the ventral truncus arteriosus and the dorsal primitive aortfe. Soon a second, a third, a fourth, and, finally, a fifth pair make their appearance in the same sequence in which the visceral arches are established in the case of Man as well as the remaining Vertebrates. The five pairs of vascular arches give off lateral branches to the neighboring organs at a very early period ; of these several acquire a great importance and become carotb- externa and interna, vertebralis and subclavia as well as pulmonalis. The carotis externa (fig. 316 ce and fig. 317 c) arises from the beginning of the first vascular arch, and is distributed to the region of the upper and THE ORGANS OF THE INTERMEDIATE LAYER OR MESENCHYME. 573 lower jaws. The carotis interna (figs. 316 ci, 317 c') likewise ari*es- from the first arch, but farther dorsally, at the point where the- arch bends around to become continuous with the root of the aorta ; it conducts the blood to the embryonic brain and to the developing eye-ball (arteria ophthalmica). From the dorsal region of tha fourth vascular arch (fig. 3 1C 4) a branch is given off which is soon divided into two branches, one of which goes headwards to the medulla oblongata and the brain, the arteria vertebralis (v), whereas the other (s) supplies the upper limb (arteria subclavia). In the course of development these two arteries interchange relations in respect to calibre. In young embryos the vertebralis is by far the more important, while the subclavia is only a small inconspicuous lateral branch. But the more the upper extremity increases in size, the more the subclavia is elevated into the position of the main trunk, and the more the vertebralis sinks to the rank of an accessory branch. Finally, from the fifth [sixth] arch there bud forth branches to the developing lungs (figs. 316, 317 p). As the simple diagram shows, the fundament of the arterial trunks which arise from the heart is originally strictly symmetrical. But at an early period there occur reductions of certain vascular tracts even to their complete disappearance ; in this way the symmetrical arrange- inent is gradually converted into an unsyinmetrical one. The accompanying diagram (fig. 318) — in which the parts of the- vascular course that degenerate are left free, and those which continue to be functional are marked by a heavy central line — will serve to illustrate this metamorphosis. First, as early as the beginning of the nuchal flexure, the first and second vascular arches — with the exception of the connecting portions through which the blood flows to the carotis externa (b) — disappear. The third arch (c) persists, but loses its connection with the dorsal end oTihe fourth, and therefore now conveys all its blood toward the head into the carotis interna (a), of which it has now become the initial part. The chisf role in the metamorphosis is assumed by the fourth and fifth arches (fig. 317 C). They soon exceed all other vessels in size, and as they lie nearest to the heart, they are converted into the two chief arteries which arise from it, the aortic arch and the arteria pulmonalis. An important modification is effected at the place of their origin from the truncus arteriosus when the latter is divided lengthwise by means of the development of the partition previously- 574 EMBRYOLOGY. mentioned. _The fourth arch (fig. 318 e) then remains in connecting with the trunk (d) which arises from the left ventricle and receives blood exclusively from that source. The fifth arch (n), on the con trary, forms the continuation of that half (in) of the truncus arteriosus which emerges from the right ventricle. Thus the division of the blood into two separate currents initiated in the heart is also continued into the nearest vessels, but for a short distance only, since the fourth and fifth pairs of vascular arches (fig. 317) still empty their blood together into the aorta communis (ad), with the exception of a certain portion which runs through their accessory branches, in part to the head (c.c') and upper limbs, in part to the still diminutive lungs. Gradually, how- ever, the process of separation thus introduced is continued still farther into the region of the peripheral vessels and finally leads to the establishment of the entirely distinct major and minor circulations. The final condition is trf ((fined by the degeneration of certain portions of the vessels and the enlargement of others. A preponderance of the vascular arches of the left side over those of the right is soon recognisable (fig. 318). The former con- tinually increase in size, while those of the right side become less and less apparent and finally in places disappear altogether. They are retained only in so far as they conduct the blood to the lateral branches which, arising from them, go to the head, the upper- limbs, and the lungs. Consequently^ of the right .aortic arch there remains only the tract which gives rise to the right carotis communis (c) and the ri^lit sulrlavia (i + l). We designate its initial part as the arteria anonyma brachiocephalica. With this the permanent con- dition is now established. The remnant of the right fourth vascular arch appears as a side branch only of the aorta (e), which forms an arch on the left side of the body, and here gives rise to the carotis communis siristra (c) and the subclavia sin. (h) as additional lateral branches. The right half of the fifth [sixth] pair of vascular arches likewise undergoes degeneration, except for the portion that conveys blood m Tig. 318. — Diagrammatic re- presentation of the meta- morphosis of the blood- vessels of the visceral arches in a Mammal, after RATHKE. <(, Carotis interna ; 6, carotis externa ; c, carotis com- munis; d, bo3y or sys- temic aorta ; e, fourth arch of the left side; /, dorsal aorta ; g, left, k, right vertebral artery ; h, left subclavian artery ; i, right subclavian (fourth arch of the right side) ; I, continuation of the right subclavian ; m, pul- monary artery ; n, its ductus BotalH. THE ORGANS OF THE INTERMEDIATE LAYER OR MESEXCHYME. 575 to the right lung. On the left side of the body, on the contrary, the pulmonary arch still persists for a long time and conducts blood into the left lung and also through the cluctus arteriosus Botalli (n), into the aorta. After birth, in connection with pulmonary respiration, the duct of BOTALLI also degenerates. For the lungs, when they are expanded by the first act of inspiration, are in a condition to receive a greater quantity of blood. The consequence is that blood no longer flows into the ductus Botalli, and that the latter is converted into a connective-tissue cord, which extends between aorta and art. pul- nionalis. In addition to the regressive changes mentioned, there are effected meantime alterations of position in the large vascular trunks that arise from the heart. They move at the same time with the heart from the neck region into the thoracic cavity. In this fact lies the explanation of the peculiar course of the nervus laryngeus inf. or re- currens. At the time when the fourth vascular arch still lies forward in the region of its formation in the fourth visceral arch, the vagus sends to the larynx a small nerve branch, which, to reach its destination, passes below [caudad of] the vascular arch. When the latter migrates downwards, the nervus laryngeus must thereby be carried down with it into the thoracic cavity, and must form a loop, one portion of which, arising in the thoracic cavity from the vagus, bends around the arch of the aorta on the left side of the body (but around the subclavia on the right side of the body) to become continuous with the secDnd portion, which takes the opposite or upward course to the region of its distribution. The processes of development discussed also throw light on a series of abnormalities which are quite frequently observed in the large vascular trunks. I shall cite and explain two of the most important of these cases. Occasionally in the territory of the vessels of the fourth visceral arches the original symmetrical condition is retained. The aorta is then divided in the adult into right and left vascular arches, which Fig. 319.— Diagrammatic re- presentation of the meta- morphosis of the arterial arches in Birds, after RATHKE. a, Internal, 6, external, c, common carotid ; d, systemic aorta; e, fourth arch of the right side (root of the aorta); /, right subclavian; g, dorsal aorta ; h, left subclavian (fourth arch of the left side) ; i, pulmonary ar- tery ; k and I, right and left ductus Botalli of the pulmonary arteries. 57 G EMBRYOLOGY. convey the blood into the unpaired aorta. From each of them there arises, as in the embryo, a separate carotis communis and subclavia. Another abnormality is brought about by the development of the aortic arch of the right side of the bcdy instead of that of the left, a condition which is met with in the class of Birds (fig. 319) as the normal state. This malformation is always connected with an altered position of the organs of the chest, a situs in versus viscerum. Of the other changes in the region of the arterial system the metamorphosis of the primitive aorta is to be mentioned before all others. As in the other Vertebrates (fig. 127 ao), so in Man, there are formed a right and a left aorta; but they subsequently move close together and fuse. This, again, explains an abnormality, which, it is true, has very rarely been observed in Man. The aorta is divided into right and left halves by means of a longitudinal partition ; the process of fusion, therefore, has not been fully effected. The aorta gives off at an early period as branches the unpaired mesenterica sup. and mesenterica inf. to the intestinal canal ; furthermore, near its posterior end, the two voluminous navel vessels, arterise umbilicales (fig. 139 Al). These run from the dorsal wall of the trunk along the sides of the pelvic cavity ventrally to that part of the allantois which is subsequently differentiated into urinary bladder and urachus, here bend upward and pass on either side of the latter in the abdominal wall to the navel, enter the umbilical cord, and are resolved in the placenta into a capillary network, from which the blood is re-collected into the venae umbilicales. During their passage through the pelvic cavity the umbilical arteries give off lateral branches that are at first inconspicuous, the iliaca& internee, to the pelvic viscera, the iliacse externre to the posterior limbs now sprouting forth from the trunk as small knobs. The more the latter increase in size in older embryos, the larger do the' iliacae externze and their continuations, the femorales, become. After giving off the two umbilical arteries, the aorta becomes smaller and is continued to the end of the vertebral column as an inconspicuous vessel, the aorta caudalis or sacralis media. At birth an important alteration occurs in this part of the arterial system also. With the detachment of the umbilical cord, the umbilical arteries can no longer receive blood; they therefore waste away with the exception of the proximal portion, which has given off as lateral branches the internal and external iliacs, and is THE ORGANS OF THE INTERMEDIATE LAYER OR MESENCHYME. 577 now designated as the iliaca communis. However, two connective- tissue cords result from the degenerating vessels, the ligamenta vesico-umbilicalia lateralia, which run to the navel on the right and TeftTof the bladder. (d) Metamorphoses of the Venous System. The older excellent works of RATHKE and the more recent meri- torious investigations of His and HOCHSTETTER constitute the foundation of our knowledge in the difficult field with which we are now concerned. They show us that originally all of the chief trunks of the venous system, with the exception oj the inferior vena cava, fire established in pairs and symmetrically. This holds true not only for- the vessels which collect the blood from the walls of the trunk and. from the head, but also for the veins of the intestinal tube and the^ embryonic appendages which arise from it. In the first place, so far as regards the veins of the body, the venous blood is collected from the head into the two jugular veins (fig. 320 vj and fig. 321 A je, ji), which run downwards along the dorsal side of the visceral clefts and unite in the vicinity of the heart with the cardinal veins (fig. 320 vca and fig. 321 A c«). The latter advance in the opposite direction, from below upwards,, in the dorsal wall of the trunk, and collect the blood especially from the mesonephros. There arise from the confluence of the- two veins the Cuvierian ducts (figs. 320, 321 A dc), from which are subsequently developed the two superior venae cavae. The veins of the trunk in Fishes exhibit a symmetrical arrangement like this throughout life. In the earliest stages the Cuvierian ducts lie for some distance in the lateral wall of the pericardio-pleural cavity, where they run downwards from the dorsum to the front [ventral] wall of the trunk (fig. 320). On arriving at this point, they enter into the septum transversum^ KOLLIKER'S mesocardium laterale, in order to reach the atrium of the heart. This important embryonic structure forms a point of collection for all the venous trunks emptying into the heart. In it there are joined to the Cuvierian ducts the veins from the viscera (fig. 313 V.om and Vu, fig. 320 dv and nv), — the paired yolk veins and umbilical veins, — all of which are joined into the common sinus veiiosus, which was previously (p. 558) mentioned apropos of the development of the heart, and which is situated directly between atrium and septum transversum. The two vitelline veins (v. omphalomesentericse) return the blood 37 578 EMBRYOLOGY from the yolk-sac ; they are the two oldest and largest venous trunks of the body, but they become inconspicuous in the same ratio as the yolk-sac shrinks to an umbilical vesicle. They run close together along the intestinal tube, and come to lie at the sides of the duodenum and stomach, where they are united to each other by transverse anastomoses even at a very eaily period. The navel veins (venae umbilicales) are also originally double. At 'first very small, they subsequently become, in contrast with the vitelline veins, more and more voluminous, as the placenta, from Fig. 320. — Sagittal reconstruction of a human embryo 5 mm. long, neck measurement (embryo R, His), to illustrate the development of the pericardio-thoracic cavity and the diaphragm, after His. ci2). The anterior, inde- pendently arising part of the inferior vena cava, soon after its establishment, unites with the two cardinal veins by means of transverse branches in the vicinity of the vena renalis (r). In con- sequence of this increase of drainage territory, it soon increases con- siderably in calibre, and since it presents more favorable conditions for the conveyance of blood from the lower half of the body than the upper portion of the cardinal veins does, it finally becomes the chief conduit. If the stage thus far described were to become the permanent condition (fig. 322 J3), we should have an inferior vena cava, which forks in the region of the renal veins (r) into two parallel trunks, that descend at both sides of the aorta to the pelvis. Such cases, as is known, are found among the varieties of the venous system ; they are derived from the previously described stages of development as malformations by arrested growth. However, they are only rarely observed, for in the normal course of development there is established at an early period an asymmetry between the lower portions of the two cardinal veins, from the moment, indeed, when they have united themselves to the lower part of the inferior vena cava by means of anastomoses. The right portion acquires a preponderance, becomes enlarged, and finally alone persists (fig. 322 JB, (7), whereas the left lags behind in growth and withers. This results from two conditions. First, the right cardinal vein (ci2) lies more in the direct prolongation of the vena cava inferior than does the left, and thus occupies a more favorable situation ; secondly, there is formed in the pelvic region an anastomosis (ilcs) between the two cardinal veins, which conducts the blood of the left hypogastrica and the left iliaca externa and cruralis to the right side. Owing to this anastomosis, which becomes the vena iliaca communis sinistra, the portion of the left cardinal vein lying between the renal veins and the pelvis (fig. 322 C caB) is rendered functionless, and with the degeneration of the primitive kidney disappears. The right cardinal vein has now become for a •vrtain distance a direct continuation of the inferior THE ORGANS OF THE INTERMEDIATE LAYER OR MESENCHYME. 583 vena cava; it furnishes that portion of the latter which is situated between the renal veins and the division into the two venae iliacse com munis (fig. 322 B and C ci'2). While the abdominal part of the left cardinal vein (fig. 322 <7c«3) succumbs and the corresponding region of_the right cardinal vein produces the lower part of the inferior vena cava (ci2), their thoracic portions persist in a reduced form, since they receive the blood from the intercostal spaces (fig. 322 B ca). In this region occurs still another and last metamorphosis, by which likewise an asymmetry is brought about between the halves of the body. In the thoracic part of the body the original conditions of the circulation are altered by the degeneration of the left cava superior (fig. 322 0 ess). The direct flow of the left cardinal vein to the atrium is thereby rendered more difficult, and finally ceases altogether, the tract desig- nated by ca2 undergoing complete degeneration. Meanwhile a trans- . .verse anastomosis (hzl), which has been formed in front of the vertebral column and behind the aorta between the corresponding vessels of both sides, receives the blood of the left side of the body and transports it to the right side. In this manner the thoracic part of the left cardinal vein and its anastomosis become jthe left hemiazygos (hz and hz l) ; the right and larger cardinal vein becomes the azygos_ (az). Thus by many indirect ways is attained the permanent condition of the venous system of the trunk, with its asymmetry and its preponderance of the venous trunks in the right half of the body. A third series of metamorphoses, which we shall now take into consideration, concerns the development of a liver circulation. The liver receives its blood in different stages of the embryonic development from various sources : for a time from the vitelline veins; during a second period from the umbilical veins; after birth, finally, from the veins of the intestines — the portal vein. This threefold alteration finds its explanation in the conditions of growth of the liver, the yolk-sac, and the placenta. As long as the liver is small, the blood coming from the yolk-sac suffices for its nourishment. But when it increases greatly in size — the yolk-sac, on the contrary, growing smaller — other blood-vessels at this time, the umbilical veins, must supply the deficiency. When, finally, at birth the placental circulation ceases, the venous trunks _pf_the intestinal canal, which meanwhile have become very large, can supply the needs. These circumstances must be kept in mind, in order to comprehend 584 EMBRYOLOGY. the shifting conditions of circulation in the liver and the profound alterations to which the venous trunks connected with it — the vitelline, umbilical, and portal veins — are naturally subjected in the changing supply of blood. When the hepatic ducts grow out from the duodenum into the ventral mesentery and septum transversum and send out shoots, they enclose the two vitelline veins accompanying the intestine, which are at this place connected with each other by ring-like anastomoses (sinus annularis, His) which surround the duodenum {fig. 320 dv). They are _supplied with blood by lateral branches given off from these veins. The more the liver increases in size, the -larger do the lateral branches (venas hepaticae advehentes) become. Between the network of hepatic cylinders (fig. 187 Ic) they are resolved into a capillary network (g), from which at the dorsal margin of the liverjarge efferent vessels (venae hepaticae revehentes) re-collect the blood and convey it back into the terminal portion of the vitelline vein, which empties into the atrium. In consequence of this the portion of the vitelline vein which lies between the venae hepaticse advehentes and revehentes continually becomes smaller, and finally atrophies altogether, since all the blood from the yolk-sac is employed for the hepatic circulation. The same process in the main is accomplished here as in the vessels of the visceral arches of gill-breathing Vertebrates, which upon the formation of branchial lamellae are converted into branchial arteries, branchial veins, and a capillary network interpolated between the two. The two umbilical veins participate, even at an early period, in the hepatic circulation. Originally they run from the umbilical cord in the front \ventral] wall of the abdomen (fig. 313 Vu\ from which they receive lateral branches, and then enter tho sinus venosus (Sr) above the fundament of the liver. They pursue, there- fore, an entirely different course from that which they do later, when the terminal part of the umbilical vein is situated under the liver. According to His, this change in their course takes place in the following manner : The right umbilical vein in part atrophies {as also in the Chick, p. 552) and becomes, as far as it persists, a vein of the ventral wall of the abdomen. The left umbilical vein, on the contrary, gives off anastomoses in the septum transversum to neighboring veins, one of which in;ikes its way under J,he_liver to the sinus annularis of the vitelline veins, and thereby conducts a part of the placental blood into the hepatic circulation. Since by its rapid growth the liver demands a large accession of blood, the THE ORGANS OF THE INTERMEDIATE LAYER OR MESENCHYWE. 585 .anastomosis soon becomes the chief course, and finally with the degeneration of the original tract receives all the blood of the umbilical veins. This, mingled with the blood of the yolk-sac, circulates through the liver in the vessels which took their origin from the vitelline veins — in the venae hepaticae advehentes and revehentes. Then it flows into the atrium through the terminal part of the vitelline vein. The latter also receives the inferior vena cava, which at this time is still inconspicuous, and can therefore be designated even now, in view of the ultimate condition, as the cardiac end of the inferior vena cava. During a brief period all of the placental blood must first traverse the hepatic circuit in order to reach the heart. A direct passage, to the inferior vena cava through the ductus veno- sus Arantii does not yet exist. But such an out- let becomes necessary from the moment when, by the growth of the embryo and the pla- centa, the blood of the umbilical veins has so increased in amount that the hepatic circu- lation is no longer able to contain it. There is then developed on the under surface of the liver out of anastomoses a more direct, connecting branch, the ductus venosus Arantii (fig. 323 d.A), between umbilical vein (n.v) and inferior vena cava (c.i''). Thus is established — and it persists until birth — a condition by which the placental blood (n.v) is divided at the port a into two currents : one passing through the ductus venosus Arantii (d.A) into the inferior vena cava (c.i ") ; the other pursuing a round-about way, passing through the venae hepaticae advehentes (ha.s and ha.d) into the liver, here mingling with the blood brought to the liver through the vitelline vein (pf.ci) from the yolk-sac and from the intestinal canal, which has in the meantime become enlarged, and finally passing through the venae hepaticae revehentes (h.r), also to jeach the inferior vena cava (c.i"). There is still something to be added concerning the development of Fig. 323.— Liver of an 8-raonths human embryo, seen Irom the under surface, from GEGENBAUR. L.le, Left lobe of the liver ; r.le, right lobe ; n.v, umbilical vein ; d.A, ductus venosv.s Arantii ; pf.a, portal vein ; ha.s, ha.d, vena hepatica advehens sinistra and dextra ; h.r, vena hepatica revehens ; c.i', cava inferior; c.i", terminal part of the cava inferior, which receives tli6 venae hepaticse revehentes (h.r). 586 EMBRYOLOGY. the portal vein. Tt is to be seen in fig. 323 as an unpaired vessel (pf.a). It empties into the right afferent hepatic vein, derives its- roots from the region of the intestinal canal, and conveys the venous blood from the latter into the right lobe of the liver. It takes its origin from the two primitive vitelline veins. According to the account of His, the two vitelline veins fuse along the tract where they run close together on the intestinal canal ; on the contrary, in the region where they run to the liver and arc connected with each other to form two ring-like anastomoses, each of which encircles the duodenum, an unpaired trunk is formed by the atrophy of the right half of the lower [posterior] ring and the left half of the upper one. The portal vein thus formed therefore runs first to the left and backward [dorsad] around the duodenum, and then emerges on the right side of it ; it draws its blood partly from the yolk-sac and partly from the intestinal canal through the vena mesenterica. Afterwards the first source is exhausted with the regressive metamorphosis of the yolk-sac, but the other becomes more and more productive with the enlargement of the intestine, the pancreas, and the spleen, and during the last months of pregnancy conveys a large stream of blood to the liver. The additional changes, which occur at birth, are easily compre- hended (fig. 323). With the detachment of the after-birth the placental circulation ceases. The umbilical vein (n.v) conveys no more blood to the liver. That portion of its tract which extends- from the umbilicus to the porta hepatis degenerates and becomes a fibrous ligament (the lig. hepato-umbilicale or lig. teres hepatis), Likewise the ductus Arantii (d.A) produces the well-known ligament enclosed in the left sagittal fissure (lig. venosum). The right and left vena3 hepaticse advehentes (ha.d, ha.s) again receive jbheir blood, as in the beginning of the development, from the intestinal canal through the portal vein (pf.a). Now that we have become acquainted with the details of the morphological changes, I close this section on the vascular system with a short sketch of the fphysial pocket, a slight depression in the epithelial lining of the fore-gut — BEESSEL'S pocket or the palatal pocket of SELENKA. It is only some time -after the rupture of the pharyngeal membrane that the chorda becomes detached from the intestinal epithelium and ter- minates free in the mesenchyma, often with a hook-like end (KEIBEL, KANN, CARIUS). In the case of Amphioxus the chorda is the only skeletal structure present in the whole of the soft body; in the lower Ver- tebrates (Cyclostomes, Fishes, Amphibia) it exists even in the adult animals as a more or less important organ ; but in the Amniota it is reduced almost to obliteration, and only in the earliest stages of development plays a role as the forerunner, as it were, of the higher form of axial skeleton which finally fig 394 — Cross section takes its place. While reference is made through the vertebral to previous portions of the text-book for in- Salmon, after GEGEN- formation about the first development of the BAUR- chorda, its further metamorphosis may be f$, Sheath of the chorda; . k, neural arch ; k', treated ot here more at length. I his varies haemal arch; m, spinal according as the chorda becomes a reallv cord; a, dorsal aorta; v, cardinal veins. functional organ or soon begins to degene- rate. In the first instance, when the band of chordal cells has been constricted off from the inner germ-layer, it becomes more sharply limited at its periphery by the secretion of a firm, homogeneous -envelope, the sheath of the chorda (fig. 324 cs). Then the cells increase in size by the accumulation of fluid within their protoplasm, which finally exists in the form of a thin superficial layer only • the cells become enveloped in firm membranes, thus acquiring exactly the appearance of plant cells. But directly beneath the sheath of the chorda (fig. 324) the cells remain small and protoplasmic and constitute a special layer, the chordal epithelium, which by proli- feration and metamorphosis of its elements causes an increase of tho substance of the chorda. TJIE ORGANS OF THE INTERMEDIATE LAYER OR MESENCHYME. 595 Immediately after its formation the chorda is in contact above with the neural tube, below with the entoderm. and laterally with the primitive segments. This relation is altered as soon as the intermediate layer makes its appearance between the first embryonic fundaments. Then a layer of cells grows around the chorda (fig. 262), spreads itself out from here around the neural tube above, and furnishes the foundation from which are developed the segmented vertebral column and in front, in the region of the five brain-vesicles, the cranial capsule ; it has therefore received the name of membranous vertebral column and of membranous cranial capsule (membranous primordial cranium) • it is also appropriately designated as skeletogenous layer, the envelope which invests the chorda being called the skeletogenous sheath of the chorda. (Compare p. 172 for an account of the first formation of it.) The mesenchyme also spreads out laterally in the embryo, pene- trates into the spaces between primitive segments, and is converted into thin plates of connective tissue (ligamenta intermuseularia), by means of which the musculature of the trunk is parted into separate muscle segments (myomeres). The muscle-fibres find attachment and support upon both the anterior and posterior faces of these plates. Such a condition is permanently preserved in Amphioxus lanceo- latus. The chorda, with its sheath, is the only firm skeletal structure. Fibrous connective tissue (membranous vertebral column) envelops it and the neural tube, and sends out into the musculature of the trunk the intermuscular ligaments. When the originally membranous tissue surrounding the chorda and neural tube is followed in its further development in the embryos of the higher Vertebrates, it is to be seen that it succes- sively undergoes two metamorphoses : that at first it is partially chondrified, and that subsequently the cartilaginous pieces are converted into osseous tissue ; or, in other words, the first-established membranous vertebral column is soon converted into a cartilaginous, and this in turn is replaced by a bony one, and in the same manner the membranous primordial cranium is transformed into a cartila- ginous, and this in turn into a bony cranial capsule. The three stages which succeed one another in the development of the higher Vertebrates are also encountered in a comparative- anatomical investigation of the axial skeleton in the series of Vertebrates, and in such a manner that the condition, which in many classes appears only as a transitory embryonic one, is retained 596 EMBRYOLOGY. permanently in the lower classes. As Amphioxus possesses a membranous axial skeleton, so the Selachians and certain of the Ganoids are representatives of the stage with cartilaginous vertebral column. The third stage in the evolution of the axial skeleton is more or less completely attained by all the higher Vertebrates. This, again, is a very instructive example — of which the embryology of the skeleton presents many others — of the parallelism which exists between the development of the individual and that of the race ; it teaches how embryological and comparative-ana- tomical investigations are mutually complemental. In the detailed description of the conditions which are observed in the development of the cartilaginous and bony axial skeleton, I shall limit myself to Man and Mammals, and since great differences exist between the posterior region, which encloses the spinal cord, and the anterior r which envelops the vesicles of the brain, I shall treat of them separately. Tig. 325. — Longitu- dinal [frontal] sec- tion through the thoracic region of the vertebral column of a human embryo 8 weeks old, after KOL- LIKER. v, Cartilaginous body of vertebra; li, intervertebral ligament; ch chorda. (a) Development of the Vertebral Column. The process of chondrification commences in Man at the beginning of the second month. At certain places in the tissue enveloping the chorda the cells secrete between themselves a cartilaginous matrix, and move farther apart, whereas at other intervening and narrower tracts the character of the tissue is not altered (fig. 325). In this manner the skeletogenous layer is differentiated into nu- merous vertebral bodies (v), which in longitudinal sections are the more translucent, and into the intervertebral discs (ligamenta intervertebralia) which separate them (li). The process of chondrification, as FEORIEP has followed it in the case of the embryo calf, proceeds as follows: there arise on both sides of the chorda masses of cartilage which are united on the ventral side of it by a thinner layer. Somewhat later the cartilaginous half-cylinder is closed on the dorsal side also. Upon the appearance of a segmented vertebral column the chorda loses its function of a supporting skeletal rod. From this time forward it therefore suffers a gradual obliteration. The parts enclosed in the bodies of the vertebrae are restricted in their growth, THE ORGANS OF THE INTERMEDIATE LAYER OR MESENCHYME. 597 whereas the shorter portions lying in the soft intervertebral discs continue to enlarge (fig. 325 ch). Thus the chorda now acquires the appearance of a string of beads, since thickened spheroidal portions are joined to one another by small connecting thread-like portions. Subsequently it entirely disappears in the bodies of the vertebrae, especially when the latter begin to ossify (fig. 326) ; the intervertebral portion (li) alone persists, although indistinctly limited from the Tig. 326.— Longitudinal [sagittal] section through the intervertebral ligament and the adjacent parts of two vertebrae from the thoracic region of an advanced embryo Sheep, after KOLUKER. la, Ligament longitudinale ancerius ; Ip, lig. long, posterius ; li, lig. inter vertebrale ; k, k', car- tilaginous caps (epiphyses) of the vertebrae ; w aud w', anterior and posterior vertebrae ; c, intervertebral, c' and c", vertebral enlargements of the chorda. surrounding tissue, and produces by the proliferation of its cells the gelatinous core of the intervertebral disc. Soon after the appearance of the bodies of the vertebrae the funda- ments of the corresponding arches are observable. According to FRORIEP'S account, there arise small, independent pieces of cartilage in the membrane enveloping the spinal cord, in the immediate vicinity of the bodies of the vertebras, with which they soon fuse. Their growth is rather slow. During the eighth week they still appear in Man as short processes from the bodies of the vertebrae, so that the spinal cord is still covered dorsally by the membranous skeleton. In the third month they grow into contact with each other at the dorsum ; however, it is only in the following month 598 EMBRYOLOGY. that a complete fusion takes place, and that cartilaginous neural spines are formed. The part of the membrane which lies between, the cartilaginous arches furnishes the ligamentous apparatus. In the process of chondrification the nascent bodies of the vertebrae have a fixed position relative to the primitive or muscle-segments , it is such that on either side of the body they are adjacent to two of the latter, one half to a preceding segment, the other half to a following one ; or, in other words, the bodies of the vertebrae and the muscle-segments do not coincide, but in their positions alternate with each other. The necessity of such an arrangement follows from the very function which vertebral column and musculature together have to fulfil. The axial skeleton must possess two opposite properties united : it must be firm, but also flexible, — firm, in order to serve as a support for the trunk ; flexible, so as not to impede the motions of the latter. Since a continuous cartilaginous rod would not have possessed sufficient flexibility, the process of chondrification could not take place throughout the whole extent of the skeletogenous layer,, but there must be left more elastic tracts, which allow a movement of the cartilaginous pieces on one another. But a movement of the cartilaginous pieces would obviously be impossible if they should lie so that the muscle fibres had their origin and insertion on one and the same vertebral element. In order that the fibres of a muscle- segment may operate upon two vertebrae, the muscular and vertebral segments must alternate in position. This process, which is easily intelligible in the way in which it has been outlined, has given occasion for the assumption of a " reseg- mentation of the vertebral column" This conception originated with EEMAK, and since then has been for a long time tenaciously held to in the literature. REMAK, like other embryologists before him (BAER), perceived in the primitive segments of the Chick the material for the establishment of the vertebral column, and therefore gave them the name " proto- vertebrae." But inasmuch as he found that the cartilaginous vertebrae did not afterwards correspond in position with the protovertebrae, h& announced the proposition that a new " segmentation of the vertebral column takes place, from which arise the secondary, permanent bodies of the vertebrae." Both the name " protovertebra " and the assumption of a reseg- mentation of the vertebral column should be dropped, and for the* following reasons : — • THE ORGANS OF THE INTERMEDIATE LAYER OR MEsENvJHYME. 599 The signification of the primitive segments consists, if not exclu- sively, at least principally, in this, that they are the fundaments of the musculature of the body. But in the arrangement of the muscu- lature is expressed the original and oldest segmentation of the vertebrate body. It is present even in Amphioxus and the Cyclostomes. The- segmentation of the vertebral column, on the contrary, was acquired much later, and has resuliel, as was explained above, from a necessary dependence on the segmentation of the musculature. A primary segmentation of the vertebral column as understood by REMAK and his followers has never existed, for the cartilaginous vertebrae are formed from an unsegmented mass of tissue enveloping the chorda — from the skeletogenous layer. One cannot speak of a segmentation of the vertebral column until the beginning of the process of chon- drification, by reason of which alone it became necessary. Even before the cartilaginous vertebral column has been completely established, it enters in Mammals upon the third stage, which begins, in Man at the end of the second month. The ossification of every cartilage takes place in the main in a corresponding, typical manner. Blood-vessels at one or several places grow from the surface into its interior, dissolve the matrix of the cartilage of a limited region, so that there arises a small cavity filled with vascular capillaries and marrow-cells. In the vicinity of this salts of lime are deposited in the cartilage. By a portion of the proliferated medullary cells, which become osteoblasts, bone substance is then secreted (fig. 326 iv). In this manner there arises in the midst of the cartilaginous tissue a so-called lone nucleus or centre of ossification, around which the destruction of the cartilage and its replacement by osseous tissue advance further and further. The places where the separate bone nuclei are formed, as well as their number, are tolerably uniform for the different cartilages. In general the ossification of each vertebra proceeds from three points. At first a centre of ossification is established in the base of each half of the vertebral arch, to which there is added somewhat later a third centre in the middle of the body of the vertebra. In the fifth month the ossification has advanced up to the surface of the cartilage. Each vertebra is now distinctly composed of three pieces of bone, which for a long time continue to be joined to one another by bridges of cartilage at the base of each half of the arch and at the union of the latter with the vertebral spines. The last remnants of cartilage do not ossify until after birth. During the first year with the development of a bony spinous process the halves 600 EMBRYOLOGY. of the arch are fused. Each vertebra is then separable after destruction of the soft parts into two pieces, into the body and the ar.ch. These are united between the third and eighth years. In addition to the pieces of bone just described, accessory centres of ossification appear on the vertebrae in subsequent years ; it is in this way that there arise the epiphysial plates at the end-surfaces of the body and the small bony pieces at the ends of the vertebral processes (the spinous processes and the transverse processes). SCHWEGEL gives detailed information concerning the time of their appearance and their fusion. Cartilaginous skeletal parts, which serve for the support of the lateral and ventral walls of the body, the ribs and the breast bone, contribute to the completion of the axial skeleton. The ribs are developed independently of the vertebral column, in Man during the second month, by the chondrification of strips of tissue in the intermuscular ligaments between the successive muscle- segments. They are at first visible as small bent rods in the imme- diate vicinity of the body of the vertebra, and from here they rapidly extend ventrally. In early stages of development ribs are established from the first to the last segment of the vertebral column (the coccyx in Man excepted), but only in the case of the lower Vertebrates (Fishes, many Amphibia, and Reptiles) are they developed into large bows supporting the wall of the trunk in a uniform manner in all regions, whereas in Mammals and in Man they exhibit in the separate regions of the vertebral column different conditions. In the neck, lumbar and sacral regions, they appear from the beginning in a rudimentary condition only, and undergo metamorphoses to be described later. It is exclusively in the thoracic region that they attain important dimensions, and here at the same time they give rise to a new skeletal part — the breast bone, or sternum. The sternum, which is wanting in Fishes and Dipnoi, but is present in Amphibia, Reptiles, Birds, and Mammals, is a formation derived from the thoracic ribs, and is vriginally established, as RATHKE was the first to discover, as a paired structure, which early fuses into an unpaired skeletal piece. HUGE has followed the development of the sternum in Man in a very thorough manner, and has found that in embryos 3 cm. long the first five to seven thoracic ribs have become prolonged into the ventral surface of the breast and by a broadening of their ends have united at some distance from the median plane to form a cartilaginous band, whereas the following ribs end free and at a greater distance from THE ORGANS OF THE INTERMEDIATE LAYER OR MESENCHYME. 601 the median plane. The two sternal bars are separated from each -other by membranous tissue ; later they approach each other in the median plane, and commencing in front, begin to fuse together into an unpaired piece, from which the individual ribs which gave rise to them are afterwards separated by the formation of joints. The paired origin of the sternum serves to explain some of its abnormalities. For example, in the adult there is sometimes seen a fissure, which, although closed by connective tissue, passes quite through the sternum (fissura sterni), or a few larger or smaller gaps are found in the body and xyphoid process of the sternum. All these abnormal cases are explained by the complete or partial failure of the two sternal bars to fuse in the usual way during embryonic life. The ossification of ribs and sternum is in part accomplished by the develop^ ment of special centres of ossification, that of the ribs beginning as early as the second month, the sternum some- what late, in the sixth foetal month. Each rib contains at first one centre of ossification, through the enlargement of which the bony part is formed, while next to the sternum a portion remains cartila- ginous throughout life. In the eighth to the fourteenth year there appear in the capitulum and tuberculum of the rib, ac- cording to SCHWEGEL and KOLLIKER, ac- cessory centres, which fuse with the main piece between the fourteenth and the twenty- fifth year. The sternum (fig. 327) ossifies from nu- merous centres, of which one arises in the manubrium, and from six to twelve in its body. Between the sixth and twelfth years the latter begin to fuse together into the three or four large pieces of which the body of the sternum is composed. The xyphoid process remains partly cartilaginous, but acquires a centre of ossification during childhood. Regarding the episternal pieces which appear on the manubrium, the text- books of comparative anatomy and the article by HUGE should be consulted. Through inequalities in the development of the separate vertebral and costal fundaments and through the fusions which take place here and there are produced the different regions of the skeleton of the trunk : the cervical, dorsal, and lumbar regions of the vertebral column, the sacrum and coccyx. A correct understanding of these skeletal parts is to be acquired only through embryology. Fig. 327. — Cartilaginous sternum, with portions of the ribs attached and with several centres of ossi- fication (kk), from a child two years old. k, Cartilage ; kk, centres of ossifica- tion ; sch, xyphoid process. 602 EMBRYOLOGY. The rudimentary fundaments of the cervical ribs at their first appearance fuse with the cervical vertebrce, at one end with the body of the vertebra, at the other with an outgrowth of the neural arch, and with the latter enclose an opening through which the vertebral artery runs — the foramen transversarium. The so-called transverse- process of the cervical vertebra is therefore a compound structure, and were better designated lateral process, for the bony rod that lies dorsad of the foramen transversum is formed by an outgrowth from the vertebra and alone corresponds to the transverse process of a dorsal vertebra ; the ventral rod, on the contrary, is a rudimentary rib, which possesses in fact a separate centre of ossification. The fundament of the rib of the seventh cervical vertebra occa- sionally attains greater size, does not fuse with the vertebra — which, consequently does not possess any foramen transversarium — and is described under the abnormalities of the skeleton as free cervical rib. Its presence is explained therefore as being the result of a more volu- minous development of a part which in all cases exists as a fundament. The transverse process of the lumbar vertebrce is also better designated as lateral process, because it encloses the rudiment of a rib. This ex- plains the phenomenon of a thirteenth or small lumbar rib occasion- ally observed in Man. The sacral region is the one that is most modified. A large number of vertebrae in this region by becoming firmly united with the pelvic girdle have lost the power of moving on one another, and are fused together into a large bone : the sacrum. This consists in human embryos of five separate cartilaginous vertebrae, the first three of which especially are characterised by very broad, well-developed lateral processes. I say lateral processes because comparative-anatomical grounds and embryological evidence both indicate that there are included in them rudimentary sacral ribs, such as in lower Vertebrates make their appearance as independent structures. On the embryological side, the method of their ossification favors this view, for each sacral vertebra undergoes ossification from five centres. To the three typical centres, those of the body and the neural arches, are added in the lateral processes large bone-nuclei (centres), which are com- parable with the centres of ossification of a rib. They produce th& well-known lateral masses of the sacrum (niassse laterales), which, bear the articular surfaces for union with the ilium. The fusion of the five bony pieces of a sacral vertebra, at first separated by strips of cartilage, takes place later than in other parts- THE ORGANS OF THE INTERMEDIATE LAYER OR MESENCHYME. 60$ of the vertebral column, namely, between the second and the sixth year after birth. For a long time the five sacral vertebrae remain separated from one another by their intervertebral discs, which begin to ossify in the eighteenth year ; the process has usually come to an end by the twenty -fifth year. Behind the sacrum there follow four or five rudimentary coccygeal vertebrae, which represent the caudal skeleton of Mammals and do not acquire centres of ossification until very late. In the thirtieth year or later they may fuse with one another, and sometimes with the sacrum. Atlas and epistropheus (axis) now demand special mention. These vertebrae acquire their peculiarities of form by an early fusion of the cartilaginous body of the atlas (fig. 328a) with the epistropheus (e) to form the odontoid process of the latter. The one therefore contains less, the other more than a normally developed vertebra. That the odontoid process is the real body of the atlas is recognisable even later by means of two facts. First, like every other vertebral body, it is traversed, as long as it remains cartilaginous, by the chorda, which at the tip Fig.328._Mediangectiort of the process is continued into the ligamentum through the body and oiispensorium and from this into the base of the odontoid p?ceM of x ... ^ie epistropheus. cranium. Secondly, it acquires in the fifth in the cartilage two cen- month of development a separate centre of ossification (fig. 328 a), which is not com- pletely fused with the body of the epistropheus until the seventh year. The neural arches of the atlas, which have remained independent, are joined together on the ventral side of the odontoid process by a tract of tissue in which an independent piece of cartilage is formed (hypochordal cartilage-rod of FRORIEP) — a structure which, according to FRORIEP, is present in every vertebra in the case of Birds. This piece of cartilage develops in the first year after birth a special centre of ossification, fuses between the fifth and the sixth year with the lateral halves, and constitutes the anterior [ventral] arch (KOLLIKER). (b) Development of the Head-Skeleton. From its position the skeleton of the head appears as the most anterior part of the axial skeleton, but it is on the whole very unlike the posterior part, — the vertebral column, — because it is adapted to <)04 EMBRYOLOGY. peculiar purposes. For in the morphological plan of Vertebrates the head takes, in comparison with the trunk, a preeminent position ; it is furnished with especially numerous and highly developed organs concentrated into a short space. The neural tube has here become differentiated into the volu- minous brain, with its dissimilar regions. In its immediate vicinity have arisen complicated sensory organs such as nose, eye, and ear. Likewise the part of the digestive tube enclosed within the head bears in many ways its peculiar stamp, since it contains the mouth opening and is provided with organs for the reception and trituration of the food, and is pierced by visceral clefts. All of these parts exercise a determining influence on the form of the skeleton, which adapts itself most accurately to the brain, to the sensory organs, and to the functions of the head-gut, and thereby becomes a very complicated apparatus, especially in the higher Vertebrates. Embryology sheds a flood of light on the method of the origin of the cephalic skeleton of Vertebrates; it shows the relations to one another of widely different lower and higher forms, and also answers the question, What relation do the vertebral column and head -skeleton sustain to each other in the plan of organisation of Vertebrates ? Consequently the development of the cephalic skeleton proves to be an especially interesting subject, which has always attracted morphologists, and which has incited to careful investigation. During the account some comparative-anatomical digressions will be made, which will contribute to the better comprehension of certain facts, especially those treated of in the final section, in which the vertebral theory of the skull will be briefly discussed. As in the case of the vertebral column, there are to be distin- guished three stages of development according to the histological character of the sustentative substance : a membranous, a carti- laginous, and a bony. The chorda serves as the foundation for the membranous skeleton of the head, and extends forward to the between-brain. At its anterior end there is formed in Amniota the cephalic flexure, by which the axis of the first two brain-vesicles makes an acute angle with the three following ones (fig. 153). Here also the mesenchyme early grows around the chorda and envelops it in a skeletogenous la }-