108 BULLETIN: MUSEUM OF COMPARATIVE ZOOLOGY. 
It has been stated in the account of the preceding cleavage that the 
cell 5° does not always touch the anterior edge of the blastopore (see 
Plate 6, Figs. 48 and 52), for the reason that the cleavage plane between 
b°3 and 6&4 may vary in position from perpendicular to the long axis of 
the egg to coincidence with the sagittal plane of the embryo. In any 
event it seems certain that these two cells always form the anterior pair 
of “secondary mesoblasts.” In cases like that represented in Figures 
48 and 52, the cells become shifted during the sixth cleavage, so that 
the plane between them approaches coincidence with the sagittal plane 
of the embryo—the common position of these cells in the thirty-two- 
cell stage. 
The position of the posterior pair of “secondary mesoblasts ” with 
reference to the anterior pair and also to the blastopore leads to the 
unavoidable conclusion that they are cut off from the cells a** and c®%, 
which are at the sides of blastopore in the thirty-two-cell stage (Figs. 51, 
52). These cells are represented in Figures 58 and 59 (Plate 7) as 
dividing. From their position later, I infer that as division progresses 
the extension of the blastoderm causes these cells to approach the median 
plane, where they meet and complete the closing of the blastopore. At 
the same time the primary mesoblasts d**, d®°* are overgrown by the 
blastoderm, and the cells a&? and c®® complete their division into the 
outer cells (a™-®, c™-®), which remain in the blastoderm, and the inner cells 
(a™, c’°), which constitute the posterior pair of ‘‘ secondary mesoblasts,” 
lie between the blastoderm and the primary mesoblasts (see Plate 7, 
Fig. 62; Plate 8, Fig. 72). 
Cases like those illustrated by Figures 60 and 61 (Plate 7) give addi- 
tional evidence in support of the above interpretation of the origin of the 
‘secondary mesoblasts.” In the egg represented in Figure 60 a rem- 
nant of the blastopore is present and at its anterior edge are the two 
blastoderm cells 47-6, 57-8. Immediately beneath them are the derivatives 
b75 and b"7, the anterior pair of “secondary mesoblasts.” In the egg 
represented in Figure 71 (Plate 8) the primary mesoblasts (d®*’, d®-*) 
have sunk beneath the blastoderm. The same relations exist between 
blastopore and anterior “secondary mesoblasts.” Similarly in Figure 
62 the posterior “secondary mesoblasts” lie beneath the cells a7-° and 
c'® which bound the sides of the blastopore. These cells are contigu- 
ous to 476 and 57-8. The same relations hold in Figure 60 and in Figures 
58 and 59 (Plate 7), which represent the divisions forming the “ secon- 
dary mesoblasts.” Comparison of the arrangement of the cells around 
the blastopore in the thirty-two-cell stage (Plate 6, Figs. 51, 52) with 
