The evolution of man : a popular exposition of the principal points of human ontogeny and phylogeny . as complementary substancebetween the other tissues, as an inner supporting substanceand as a protective covering for the inner organs. Of thenumerous forms and varieties of connective tissue, we regardthe jelly-like tissue (Fig. 291 : Fig. 6, vol. i. p. 126), the fattytissue, and the chorda tissue as the earlier; the fibrous,cartilaginous (Fig. 292), and bone-tissue (Fig. 5, vol. i. p. 126)as the more recent formations. All these various forms ofconnective tissue are products of the middle ge
The evolution of man : a popular exposition of the principal points of human ontogeny and phylogeny . as complementary substancebetween the other tissues, as an inner supporting substanceand as a protective covering for the inner organs. Of thenumerous forms and varieties of connective tissue, we regardthe jelly-like tissue (Fig. 291 : Fig. 6, vol. i. p. 126), the fattytissue, and the chorda tissue as the earlier; the fibrous,cartilaginous (Fig. 292), and bone-tissue (Fig. 5, vol. i. p. 126)as the more recent formations. All these various forms ofconnective tissue are products of the middle germ-layer,or mesoderm ; or, more accurately, of the two fibrous layers,of which the skin-fibrous layer is originally derived fromthe exoderm, the intestinal-fibrous layer from the nerve-muscular tissue (neuro-musculum) is of muchmore recent origin than the connective tissue. If epithelialtissue represents a primary period in tribal history, and 3^4 THE EVOLUTION OF MAN. connective tissue a secondary period, then we may cha-racterize a third, much later period, by nerve-muscle Fig. 293.
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Keywords: ., book, bookcentury1800, bookdecade1870, booksubjectembryologyhuman