10 ENGLISH BOOKS RELATING TO «CENOGENETICALLY»
Discover the use of
cenogenetically in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
cenogenetically and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
1
The Evolution of Man (Complete)
In this case, again, it isclear that we must regard the features of the younger
craniotaas cenogenetically modified processes that can be traced
palingenetically totheolderacrania. We have an interesting intermediate
stagebetween the ...
Ernst Heinrich Philipp August Haeckel
2
Journal of the Royal Microscopical Society
... In all vertebrates the oldest primitive organ is a simple epithelium or
blastoderm ; this is absolutely preserved in Amphioxus only, for in the blastula of
craniate vertebrates it is ruoro or less cenogenetically modified. From this
primitive organ of ...
3
The evolution of man: a popular scientific study
Just as the countless species of the metazoa do actually develop cenogenetically
from the simple embryonic form of the gastrula, so they have all descended
phylogenetically from the common stem-form of the gastraea. In this fact, and the
fact ...
Ernst Heinrich Philipp August Haeckel, Joseph McCabe, 1905
4
The American Journal of Psychology
... that the characters in ontogeny are unfolded in the order of phylogenetic
differentiation and that while thus unfolding, any portion "of the history may be
cenogenetically revised. The following errata occur in the first section : p. 98, line
14 from ...
Granville Stanley Hall, Edward Bradford Titchener, Karl M. Dallenbach, 1891
5
The Annals and Magazine of Natural History: Zoology, Botany, ...
The same conditions are found in the case of the larval Acarina, and we are
tempted to assume that in the Acarina the formation of the tracheae has been
cenogenetically transferred to the postembryonic period, while they originally
possessed ...
6
Report of the Commissioner of Fisheries to the Secretary of ...
... are tending to degenerate in the same •lirection as have the same elements in
the cetaceans. 14. By the tendency in cetaceans to prolong the lumbar plexus
towards the tail to supply the cenogenetically developed caudal muscu latore ...
United States. Bureau of Fisheries, 1887
7
Report of the Commissioner - United States Commission of ...
... are tending to degenerate in the same direction as have the same elements in
the cetaceans. 14. By the tendency in cetaceans to prolong the lumbar plexus
towards the tail to supply the cenogenetically developed caudal musculature. 15.
United States. Bureau of Fisheries, 1887
8
Zoological Results Based on Material from New Britain, New ...
Amphiowus possesses atrial folds, but not medullary folds 1, the central nervous
system forming cenogenetically by delamination. 4. The two halves of the
Tunicate atrium are confluent dorsally. 5. The two halves of the atrium of Amphz'
oams ...
9
The evolution of the species or phylogeny
In the genealogical tree of the Vertebrates this palingenetic form of segmentation
has been preserved in the Amphioxus alone, all the other Vertebrates having
cenogenetically modified forms of cleavage (see the Third Table). In any case,
the ...
Ernst Heinrich Philipp August Haeckel, 1910
10
Quarterly Journal of Microscopical Science
... shallow gastrula groove of mammals an ingrowth along the lips of a wide-open
circular or elongated blastopore could be noticed, even then the direct fusion of
this palingenetic hypoblast with that which had been cenogenetically developed
...