50 MEMOIR OF BARON HALLER. 



riscera is placed exterior to the body of the chick, 

 and is connected only by a canal of communication. 

 During the latter stages of incubation, and especially 

 in the hatched chicken, things are quite altered. 

 The internal viscera now have become large and 

 visible, the canal of communication and the yolk 

 have faded and disappeared, and the chick has 

 nothing pertaining to it external to itself. Again, 

 the dorsal aorta of the chick, before it is hatched, 

 appears to be a common trunk with three branches, 

 two of which belong to the pulmonary artery, and 

 the third to the left ventricle of the heart; but 

 after it is hatched, the aorta is only a simple artery, 

 proceeding from the left ventricle, and having no 

 connexion with the pulmonary vessels. Once more, 

 the chick of the first day is scarcely more than a 

 head with a slender thread, which is the spinal 

 column ; when twenty-two days old, the extremities 

 and viscera have been elaborated out of this almost 

 invisible appendage, and the head in its turn has 

 become an appendix. 



Relative change of place is another instrument 

 employed by nature. Of this we see an example 

 in the yolk and intestines. Both these are external 

 to the chick, almost to the termination of incuba- 

 tion, and the embryo being appears to have two 

 bodies communicating together, the one consisting 

 of the head, extremities, and internal cavities, and 

 the other of the yolk, the umbilical membrane, and 

 the intestines, all parts of the chick, and yet de- 

 tached from it. The membrane fades and disap- 



