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The subdivisions of the neural folds in man

The subdivisions of the neural folds in man Department of Anatomy, The University of Chicago, and the Laboratory of Embryology, Carnegie Institufion of Washington SIX FIGURES Veit and Esch have recently given us the most complete and detailed study of a vertebrate embryo during the period of somite formation that has ever appeared. 911 the labor and study expended upon it has been well worth while, as human embryos of this period are very rare. The specimen is certainly normal and the preservation above reproach. The embryo has eight somites and belongs to the beginning of the third week, a period which Prof. H. M. Evans and I have been studying for some years. Most of Veit and Esch’s findings fit well into the sequence of events as we have interpreted it from our series of embryos. There is, however, a radical disagreement, in our interpretations of the nervous system, and in view of the great importance of the Veit embryo to human embryology, it would seem wise to call attention t o the matter. In his first paper based upon this embryo (’18), as well as in the complete description (’22) Veit has adopted a slight modification of the traditional interpretation of the nervous system http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png The Journal of Comparative Neurology Wiley

The subdivisions of the neural folds in man

The Journal of Comparative Neurology , Volume 35 (3) – Apr 1, 1923

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References (16)

Publisher
Wiley
Copyright
Copyright © 1922 The Wistar Institute of Anatomy and Biology
ISSN
0021-9967
eISSN
1096-9861
DOI
10.1002/cne.900350304
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

Department of Anatomy, The University of Chicago, and the Laboratory of Embryology, Carnegie Institufion of Washington SIX FIGURES Veit and Esch have recently given us the most complete and detailed study of a vertebrate embryo during the period of somite formation that has ever appeared. 911 the labor and study expended upon it has been well worth while, as human embryos of this period are very rare. The specimen is certainly normal and the preservation above reproach. The embryo has eight somites and belongs to the beginning of the third week, a period which Prof. H. M. Evans and I have been studying for some years. Most of Veit and Esch’s findings fit well into the sequence of events as we have interpreted it from our series of embryos. There is, however, a radical disagreement, in our interpretations of the nervous system, and in view of the great importance of the Veit embryo to human embryology, it would seem wise to call attention t o the matter. In his first paper based upon this embryo (’18), as well as in the complete description (’22) Veit has adopted a slight modification of the traditional interpretation of the nervous system

Journal

The Journal of Comparative NeurologyWiley

Published: Apr 1, 1923

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