98 ZOOT.DOY sect. 



veins. Leucocytes are added to the plasma in bodies called 

 lym/phattc [/lands, which occur in the course of the vessels. Valves 

 ma}' be present to prevent any flow of lymph towards the 

 capillaries, and in some cases the flow of the fluid is assisted by 

 lymjjli-hearts, muscular dilatations in the course of certain of the 

 vessels. The lymphatics of the intestine have an important 

 function in \ho absnrption of fats, and are known as Icuieals (Ic.) 



The nervous system attains a complexity, both anatomical and 

 histological, unknown in the rest of the animal kingdom. It 

 arises, as in other Chordata, from a dorsal medullary groove the 

 edges of which unite and enclose a tube. From the ectoderm 

 lining the tube the whole central nervous system, or ^ic?^ row, is formed ; 

 its lumen forms the neuroixele or characteristic axial cavit}' of the 

 neuron. So far the agreement with the lower Chordata is com- 

 plete, but a fundamental advance is seen in the fact that at an 

 early period — before the closure of the medullary groove — the 

 anterior end of the neuron undergoes a marked dilatation and 

 forms the rudiment of the brain, the rest becoming the spinal 

 cord. Moreover, as growth goes on, a space appears in the meso- 

 derm immediately surrounding the nervous s^^stem, and forms the 

 neural or ccrehro-spinal racitij already referred to (Fig. 760, c.s. c), 

 so that the neuron, instead of being solidly imbedded in mesoderm, 

 lies in a well-marked and often spacious tube enclosed by the 

 neural arches of the vertebrae, and in front by the cranium 

 (Fig. 760, B-D). 



The spinal cord (Fig. 777) is a thick-walled cylinder, con- 

 tinuous in front with the brain. It is traversed from end 

 to end by a narrow centird canal (3), lined by ciliated epithelium 

 derived from the superficial layer of in-turned ectoderm cells. 

 The dorsal surface of the cord is marked by a deep, narrow, longi- 

 tudinal cleft, the dorsal fissure (3), the ventral surface is similarly 

 scored by a groove, the ventral Jissurc (1) ; owing to the presence of 

 these fissures a transverse section presents two almost semi- 

 circular halves with their straight edges applied to one another 

 and joined in the middle by a narrow bridge (4, o) in which the 

 central canal lies. 



The cord is made up of two kinds of tissue. Surrounding the 

 central canal and having a somewhat butterfly-shaped transverse 

 section, is the grey mcdter {a, e) consisting of delicate, inter-twined, 

 non-medullated nerve-fibres, amongst which are numerous nerve- 

 cells. The superficial portion is composed of medullated nerve-fibres 

 running longitudinally, and is called the white matter (0, 7, 8). In 

 both grey and white matter the nervous elements are supported 

 by a non-nervous tissue called neuroglia, formed of branched cells. 



From the cord the spinal nerves are given off. They arise in 

 pairs from the sides of the cord, and agree in number with the 

 myomeres. Each nerve arises from the cord by two roots, a 



