THE LATER DEVELOPMENT OF THE FROG 



171 



In the region of the head and pharynx the mesoderm is 

 injhe form of scattered groups of cells, mesenchymal in charac- 

 ter, filling the irregular spaces among the organs of these 

 regions, brain, sense 

 organs, ganglia, gill- 

 pouches, etc. Some of 

 the details of the later 

 history of this mesoderm 

 have already been men- 

 tioned in connection 



in 



with the visceral 

 pouches, and others will 

 be considered with the 

 history of the vascular 

 and skeletal systems. 

 We may mention here, 

 however, the essential 

 facts regarding the 

 development of the 

 somites and lateral 

 plate. 



The formation and 

 differentiation of the 

 somites and lateral plate 

 occur progressively in 

 the posterior direction, 

 so that in a young larva 

 all of the process may 



1 J FIG. 60. Transverse section through the 



be read in a Series Of sixth meaodermal somite of a 5 mm. larva of R. 



trflTlSVPTXP <3 P o t i n n temporaria, illustrating the arrangement of the 



mesoderm. From Maurer (Hertwig's Hand- 



The cavity of the SO- buch, etc -)- c > Cutis plate; Ch, notochord; D, 



, . .. gut, wall; m, myotome (muscle plate); me, nerve 



mite, the myOCOel, lies cord; p, lateral plate; v, ventral process of myo- 



toward its surface; the tome and cutis plate - 

 outer wall, only one cell thick, forms the cutis plate or derma- 

 tome, lying just beneath the surface ectoderm (Fig. 60). 

 The inner wall of the somite is much thickened as the 

 nti/otonte or muscle plate; through the continued thickening 



