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 ALC) 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 Wolifian 

 and Miillerian ducts is 

 called sinus iiroyenitalis 

 (fig. 219 sug and 229 ug\ 

 a structure which will often 



Fig. 229. Diagram of the urogenital organs of a 

 Mammal at an early stage, after AI.LF..V THOM.SOX ; 

 from BALFOUR. 



The parts are seen chiefly in profile, but the Miillerian 

 and Wolffian ducts are seen from the front. 



3, Ureter ; h, urinary bladder ; 5, urachus ; ot, genital 

 gland (ovary or testis) ; W, left Wolffian body 

 (primitive kidney) ; x, its diaphragmatic ligament ; 

 ic, Wolman (mesonephric) duct ; m, Miillerian 

 duct ; ffc, genital cord consisting of Wolman and 

 Miillerian 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. 



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 

 cZ), 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 cose all the elimination- 

 products of the body are conducted to the outside through the 

 cloaca, out of the hind intestine the faecal masses, out of the 



