THE ORGANS OF THE MIDDLE GEEM-LAYBR. 397 



In its last stages the descent in the female is accomplished in 

 a manner different from that in the male. For instead of advancing 

 like the testes toward the inguinal region, the ovaries, when the 

 development is normal, sink down instead into the true pelvis. Here 

 they are enclosed between bladder and rectum in the broad ligament, 

 which is developed out of the peritoneal folds, and in which originally 

 the primitive kidneys, the ovaries, and the MuUerian ducts are 

 imbedded. 



Naturally the round ligament cannot be of influence during this 

 last stage of the descent in the female, because it can exercise a 

 traction only in the direction of the inguinal region, where it is 

 attached. The descent into the true pelvis seems rather to be due to 

 the conversion .of the lower region of the Miillerian ducts into the 

 uterus. At any rate, the ovaries are joined to the uterus by means 

 of a firm cord of connective tissue, 

 the ligamentum ovarii. 



In rare cases in the female the 

 ovaries can continue to change their 

 position in a manner corresponding 

 to that in the male. They migrate 

 then toward the inguinal region up 

 to the entrance into the processus 

 vaginaUs (diverticulum Nuckii); oc- ''^ Z-l^ZT^Z^ZttL'r 

 casionally they here cease to advance. The cross section shows the fusion of the- 



- , .. .1 'j. £ 2.1 • A. MiiUerian ducts (mo) : wff, mesonephric 



but sometimes they enter tarther into ^^^.^^ 



the abdominal wall through the in- 

 guinal canal ; indeed, as has been observed in several instances, they^ 

 can pass quite through the wall of the abdomen and at last imbed 

 themselves in the labia majora. The latter then acquire a great 

 similarity to the scrotum of the male. 



(i) The Development of the External Sexual Organs. 



The section which deals with the urinary and sexual organs is 

 really the most suitable place at which to introduce the development 

 of the external sexual organs, notwithstanding they do not arise 

 from the middle germ-layer, but in part fr6m the outer and in part 

 from the inner germ-layer. In order to give an exhaustive account 

 of them, we must go back to rather early stages of development — 

 to the time when in the embryo the "Wolffian and MuUerian ducts 

 are established. Having first arisen in the most anterior part of the- 



