236 



THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE CHICK 



final termination without addition on the part of other cells. 

 The body of the neuroblast forms the nerve-cell, from which, 

 later on, secondary processes arise constituting the dendrites. 



The view that each nerve-cell with its axone process and 

 dendrites is an original cellular individual, is known as the neurone 

 theory. For the central nervous system this view is generally 

 held, but its extension to the peripheral system is opposed by 

 some on the ground that the axone in peripheral nerves is formed 

 within chains of cells, and is thus strictly speaking not an original 

 product of the neuroblast, though it may be continuous with the 

 axis cylinder process of a neuroblast. This view is discussed 

 under the peripheral nervous system. 



Each medullary neuroblast is primarily unipolar and the 



axone is the original outgrowth. 

 Soon, however, secondary proto- 

 plasmic processes arise from the 

 body of the nerve-cell and form the 

 dendrites. These appear first in 

 motor neuroblasts of the ventro- 

 lateral portion of the embryonic 

 cord, whose axones enter into the 

 ventral roots of spinal nerves (Fig. 

 140). The extent and kind of de- 

 velopment of these dendritic pro- 

 FiG. 140. — Transverse section cesses of the nerve-cells varies 

 through the spinal cord of a extraordinarily in different regions; 

 chick on the fourth day of Y\g^. 139, 140, and 141 give an idea 



of their rapid development in the 

 motor neuroblasts up to the eighth 



dav. 



The Ganglionic Neuroblasts, The 



ganglionic neuroblasts are located, 



as the name implies, in the series of 



ganglia derived from the neural 



It must not be supposed, however, that all of the cells 



incubation; prepared by the 

 method of Golgi. (After Ra- 

 mon y CajaL) 



C. a., Anterior commissure. 

 D., Dendrite, d. R., Dorsal root. 

 Ep. Z., Ependymal zone. W., 

 White matter (marginal velum). 

 Nbl. 4, Neuroblast of the ventral 

 horn (motor). 



crest. 



of the ganglia are neuroblasts, for the ganglia contain, in all 

 probability, large numbers of cells of entirely different function. 

 (Sheath-cells, see peripheral nervous system.) It is probable 

 also that the neuroblasts of the spinal ganglia and some cranial 

 ganglia, at least, are of two original kinds, viz., the neuroblasts of 



