THE MORPHOLOGICAL COMPOSITION OF ANIMALS. 107 



which ends in a point posteriorly. Anteriorly, it sends out 

 two processes which underlie the lateral parts of the skull, 

 but very soon coalesce for a longer or shorter distance. Pos 

 teriorly, the sheath projects but little beyond the notochord ; 

 but, anteriorly, for a considerable distance, as far as the in- 

 fundibulum. It sends upwards two plates, which embrace 

 the future central parts of the nervous system laterally, pro 

 bably throughout their entire length.&quot; All this precedes 

 segmentation. Considered under its broadest aspects, the 

 process is directly opposed to the process among the An- 

 vulosa. Whereas among the Anmilosa the first step is the 

 resolution of the germ-mass or of the blastoderm into seg- 

 m.3iits, which may or may not afterwards become inte 

 grated ; in the Vertebrata the first step is the marking 

 out on the blastoderm of an integrated structure within 

 which segments subsequently appear. When these do ap 

 pear, they are for some time limited to the middle region of 

 the spinal axis ; and no more then than ever after, do they 

 implicate the general mass of the body in their transverse di 

 visions. On the contrary, before segmentation has made 

 much progress the rudiments of the vascular system are laid 

 down in a manner showing not the remotest trace of any 

 primordial correspondence of its parts with the divisions of the 

 axis. No less at variance with the belief that the 



vertebrate animal is essentially a series of homologous parts, 

 is the heterogeneity which exists among these parts on their 

 first appearance. Though in the head of an adult articulate 

 animal there is little sign of divisibility into segments like 

 those of the body ; yet such segments, with their appropriate 

 ganglia and appendages, are easily identifiable in the articu 

 late embryo. But in the vertebrata this antithesis is exactly 

 reversed. At the time when segmentation has become de 

 cided in the dorsal region of the spine, there is no trace of 

 segments in the parts that are to form the skull nothing 

 whatever to suggest that the skull is being formed out of 

 Divisions homologous with vertebrae. And minute observa- 



