336 



THE EVOLUTION OF MAN. 



anterior " intestinal gate " (Fig. 102, at d). Just in the 

 same way the tail curves back against the ventral surface • 

 the intestinal wall then encloses posteriorly a similar small 



r ff 



in 



* , h 7i 'vo J 3 ^ 



Fig. 101. — Longitudinal section through the embryo of a Chick (fifteenth 

 day of incubation). Embryo with arched dorsal surface (black) : cZ, intes- 

 tine ; 0, mouth ; a, anus : I, lungs ; h, liver ; g, mesentery ; v, auricle of 

 heart; it, ventricle of heart; fe, arterial arches; #, aorta; c, yelk-sac; w, 

 yelk-duct ; ti, allantois ; r, stalk of allantois ; n, amnion ; %v, amnion- 

 cavity ; s, serous membrane. (After Baer.) 



cavity, the hind end of which is blind ; this is the pelvic 

 intestinal cavity. Its opening into the middle intestine 

 is the " hind intestinal gate." 



In consequence of these processes the embryo assumes a 

 form resembling a canoe lying bottom upward. Imagine a 

 canoe with rounded ends, and fitted with a little deck fore 

 and aft ; then turn this canoe upside down, so that its 

 arched bottom is uppermost : this affords an approximate 

 representation of this canoe-shaped embryo (Fig. 101, e). 



