270 THE DOCTRINE OF DESCENT. 



tion of the pectoral arch, and their persistence in the 

 phase (embryonic in other mammals) in which the rectum 

 and the urinary and genital ducts open into a single 

 cloaca, the Monotremata (Ornithorhynchus, Echidna), 

 limited to Australia and Tasmania, are the lowest mem- 

 bers of their class, and must be considered as remnants 

 of a division reaching from indeterminable past ages 

 down to the present time. It may be presumed that 

 the Marsupials were developed from an analogous grade. 

 Their powers of adaptation have been chiefly testified 

 in Australia, where the subdivisions of the order, usually 

 designated as families, are, in dentition and habits of life, 

 developed in a manner analogous to several of those 

 orders which appear on the second great scene of mam- 

 malian development, namely, the Northern hemisphere. 



Far advanced beyond the Monotremata as to skeleton, 

 they remain on a low grade with respect to the repro- 

 ductive system, and are implacental, like the Monotre- 

 mata. That is to say, the embryonic blood-vessels do not 

 enter into those close relations with the blood-vessels of 

 the maternal ovary, by which the more perfect develop- 

 ment of other mammals within the mother's womb is 

 effected. This character and the correlative formation of 

 the pouch in which to carry the immaturely born off- 

 spring, bind together the various families of Marsupials, 

 which deviate from one another like other orders. 



With the exception, therefore, of the two orders 

 named, in all mammals the embryo is attached to the ma- 

 ternal organism by the so-called placenta. The blood- 

 vessels of the developing offspring which reach the wall 

 of the uterus by the intervention of the allantois, form 

 coils and loops, between which grow similar oflfshoots 



