DEVELOPMENT OF THE TWO MIDDLE GERM-LAYERS. 



113 



collected, and the coelenteron more or less completely filled with it. 

 Consequently there are formed in the?e cases for the produc ion cf 

 the body-cavity no hollow evaginations, but solid cell-growths, in that 

 the parietal and the 

 visceral lamellce of the 

 middle germ-layer have 

 the surfaces which inAm- 

 phioxus bound the body- 

 cavity pressed together at 

 the beginning of the de- 

 velopment and separated dk 

 only at a rather late 

 stage. In order to make 

 easier the comprehen- 

 sion of the somewhat 

 dissimilar appearances 

 furnished by an inves- 

 tigation of the separate 

 classes of Vertebrates, 

 let us describe first, with 



Fig. 73. Diagram to show the development of the middle 

 germ-layers and the body-cavity in Vertebrate. 



Cross section of an embryo in front of the blastopore. 



mp, Medullary plate; ch, fundament of the chorda; ale, 

 ' outer, ik, inner germ-layer ; mk\ parietal, ml?, visceral 

 lamella of the middle germ-layer; d, yolk-mass; die, 

 volk-nuclei ; dh, intestinal cavity ; Ih, body-cavity. 



the aid of two diagram- 

 matic figures, how, according to a series of investigations which I 

 have undertaken, the development of the middle germ-layer and 



the body-cavity would take 

 place in the case of the 

 vertebrated animals. 



One of the diagrams (fig. 

 73) represents a cross section 

 in front of the blastopore. 

 It exhibits the inner germ- 

 layer (ik) extensively thick- 

 ened on the ventral side by 

 the deposition of yolk (d). so 

 that the .coelenteron is re- 

 duced to a small cavity (dh). 

 In the roof of the coelenteron 

 there lies a single layer of 

 cells (ch), the fundament of 



the chorda, characterised by their cylindrical form. On both sides 

 of it the inner germ -layer has developed evaginations,. the two 

 body-sacs (Ih), which have grown down some distance between 



8 



Fig. 74. Cross section or an An:phioxus embryo. 



See explanation of Fig. 70. 

 ak, Outer, it, inner, mk, middle germ-layer; ch, 



chorda. 



