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 (coelom-sacs) possess 

 a greater extent in the embryo than they do sub- 

 sequently, since they reach into the most anterior 

 part of the embryonic fundament, the head. 



In the further course of development the walls 

 of the head-cavity are differentiated, in the same Fig. 196. Cross section 



manner as the walls of the body-cavity, into a ?""** the n f i * 



the last visceral arch 



ventral portion and a dorsal portion, the latter of an embryo of Pris- 

 protluciiiL' primitive segments. Then there arises, ti - after BAL - 



ip, Epidermis ; re, inner 



however, an important difference between head visceral pouch ; 

 and trunk ; in the trunk only the dorsal portion 



is segmented, but in the head both ventral and visceral arch; a 



, , . 11- vessel of the visceral 



dorsal portions are segmented, .each in a manner arch (aortic an . h) 

 peculiar to itself. 



The ventral part of the head-cavity is divided, in consequence 

 of the development of the visceral clefts, into separate segments 

 (branchiorneres AHLBORN), the first of which is situated in front of 

 the first cleft, each of the remaining ones between two clefts. Each. 

 segment (fig. 196) consists of a wall composed of cylindrical cells and 

 encloses a narrow cavity. With its enveloping connective tissue it 

 constitutes the visceral arches, which are separated from one another 

 by the visceral clefts ; for this reason the fissures arising from the 

 head-cavity have been designated by WIJHE as visceral-arch cavities. 

 The latter communicate for a time under the gill-pouches with the 

 pericardial chamber surrounding the heart. But then they begin to 

 be closed ; their walls come into contact ; and out of the cylindrical 

 epithelial cells are developed the transversely striped muscle fibres 

 which produce the muscles of the jaws and gills. 



Consequently there results for the head-region of Vertebrates this 



