Manual of Human Embryology II - Figures
Figures
XIV. The Development of the Nervous System
I. Histogenesis of Nervous Tissue
I. Histogenesis of Nervous Tissue
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Fig. 2. Wall of the neurfl tube in a human embryo about two weeks old, showing its syncytial character.
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Fig. 3. Diagram showing the differentiation of the cells of the wall of the neural tube
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Fig. 4. Development of neuroglia framework.
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Fig. 5. Combined drawings, after Golgi and Benda methods, of the spinal cord of fetal pig, 20 cm. long
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Fig. 6. Section of spinal cord of suckling pig of two weeks
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Fig. 7. Neuroglia fibres in adult human spinal cord, showing their relation to 'the protoplasm of the neuroglia cell and its processes.
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Fig. 8. Diagram showing distribution of neuroblasts in human embryo of four weeks.
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Fig. 9. Cluster of neuroblasts from nucleus of origin of n. oculomotorius, showing characteristic shape and grouping of cells.
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Fig. 10. Section through floor of mid-brain of human embryo one month old.
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Fig. 11. Isolated ganglion-cells, from embryonic spinal cord of frog, and growing in clotted lymph.
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Fig. 12. Three views, taken at intervals of Ik and 8i hours, of the same living nerve-fibres growing from a mass of spinal-cord tissue (frog embryo) out into clotted lymph.
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Fig. 13. Transverse .sections through dorsal region of human embryos showing three stages in the development of the ganglion crest and the anlage of the spinal ganglia.
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Fig. 14. Section through spinal ganglion of human embryo 18 mm. long, about 6 weeks old .
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Fig. 15. Section through cervical spinal ganglion of human fetus 8.5 cm. long, about 3 months old, showing large ganglion-cells with eccentric nuclei.
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Fig. 16. Section through sixth cervical ganglion of human fetus 10.5 cm. long, about 4 months old.
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Fig. 17. Isolated cells teased from spinal ganglia of embryo pigs 20-40 mm. long, showing the variation in the form of the early ganglion-cells
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Fig. 18. Teased preparations from spinal ganglia of pig, showing development of sheath and capsule cells.
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Fig. 19. Isolated fibres showing development of medullary sheath.
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Fig. 20. Isolated fibres of the sciatic nerve of sheep fetus 15 cm. long, treated with osmic acid and showing development of the nerve-sheath.
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Fig. 21. Section through hind-brain of new-born child, showing myelinization of fifth, sixth, seventh, and eighth cranial nerves and associated fibre tracts
II. Development of the Central Nervous System
II. Development of the Central Nervous System
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XVII. The Development of the Digestive Tract and of the Organs of Respiration
XVII. The Development of the Digestive Tract and of the Organs of Respiration
The Early Development of the Entodermal Tract and the Formation of its Subdivisions
The Development of the Pharynx and of the Organs of Respiration
The Development of the Pharynx and of the Organs of Respiration
I. General Morphology of the Pharyngeal Pouches
I. General Morphology of the Pharyngeal Pouches
II. The Differentiation of the Pharyngeal Pouches - the Second Pharyngeal Pouch and the Tonsils
II. The Differentiation of the Pharyngeal Pouches - the Second Pharyngeal Pouch and the Tonsils
B. The Development of the Respiratory Apparatus
III. The Third to the Fifth Pharyngeal Pouches - the Branchiogenic Organs
III. The Third to the Fifth Pharyngeal Pouches - the Branchiogenic Organs
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Cite this page: Hill, M.A. (2024, June 15) Embryology Manual of Human Embryology II - Figures. Retrieved from https://embryology.med.unsw.edu.au/embryology/index.php/Manual_of_Human_Embryology_II_-_Figures
- © Dr Mark Hill 2024, UNSW Embryology ISBN: 978 0 7334 2609 4 - UNSW CRICOS Provider Code No. 00098G