168 



EMBRYOLOGY. 



front into eight pairs of primitive segments (uw), whereas in the 

 hind end of the embryonic area they still have the form of a con- 

 tinuous mass of cells, the 

 stem-zone (stz), which in sur- 

 face-views appears darker 

 than its surroundings. 



In a somewhat more ad- 

 vanced stage the primitive 

 segment, which probably se- 

 cretes at the same time fluid, 

 develops in its interior, as 

 in the case of the Amphibia 

 and Selachii, a cavity, around 

 which the cells group them- 

 selves in a radial manner. 

 This cavity, too, is at first in 

 communication laterally with 

 the fissure of the body-cavity, 

 until the primitive segment 

 has been fully constricted 

 off. 



In Vertebrates, besides the 

 trunk-region, a part of the 

 head-region of the embryo is 

 also affected by this process 

 of segmentation which wo 

 have been considering. \V 

 must therefore speak in the 

 one case of head-segments, 

 and in the other of trunk- 

 segments. Up to the present 

 time the number and condi- 

 tion of the head-segments have 

 been made out (by BALFOUR, 

 MILXES MARSHALL, and VAN 

 mot accurately for 



Fig. 106. -Rabbit embryo of the ninth day, seen 

 from the dorsal aide, after KOLLIKEII. Magnified 



Mum 



The stem-tone (te) and the parietal zone (pz) are 



to be distinguished. In the former 8 pairs of 



primitive segments have been established at the 



aide of the chorda and neural tube. 

 ap. Area pellucida ; >/, medullary groove ; v 



brain ; 06, eye-vesicle ; *>h, mid brain ; hk, hind 



brsin ; me, primitive segment ; itt, stem-zone ; 



/, parietal zone; h, heart ; ph, pericardia. 



of the body-cavity ; vd, margin of the entrance to 



the head-gut (tordere Darmpfotte), seen through 



the overlying structures ; af, anmiotic fold ; t-o, 



vena oinphalomesenterica. 



the Selachians. . In this in- 

 stance there are nine pairs of hollow head-segments. In the higher 

 Vertebrates such segments although tiwr in number, have also 

 been described; however, the less sharply differentiated stiuctuies 

 of the latter demand still further investigation. 



