×
MindLuster Logo
Join Our Telegram Channel Now to Get Any New Free Courses : Click Here

Notochord

Share your inquiries now with community members Click Here
Sign Up and Get Free Certificate
Sign up Now

Lessons List | 52 Lesson
Show More Lessons

Comments

Our New Certified Courses Will Reach You in Our Telegram Channel
Join Our Telegram Channels to Get Best Free Courses

Join Now

We Appreciate Your Feedback

Excellent
8 Reviews
Good
6 Reviews
medium
0 Reviews
Acceptable
0 Reviews
Not Good
0 Reviews
4.6
14 Reviews


Angela Karapetyan

cool 2024-05-04

Haritha Reddy

very interesting and useful 2024-02-23

AMINU YUSUFYAHMAN

Beautiful plat form for academics encouragement 2024-02-03

Bhagwat RAM Barar

[email protected] 2023-12-16

Show More Reviews

Course Description

embryology, the study of the formation and development of an embryo and fetus. Before widespread use of the microscope and the advent of cellular biology in the 19th century, embryology was based on descriptive and comparative studies. From the time of the Greek philosopher Aristotle it was debated whether the embryo was a preformed, miniature individual (a homunculus) or an undifferentiated form that gradually became specialized. Supporters of the latter theory included Aristotle; the English physician William Harvey, who labeled the theory epigenesis; the German physician Caspar Friedrick Wolff; and the Prussian-Estonian scientist Karl Ernst, Ritter von Baer, who proved epigenesis with his discovery of the mammalian ovum (egg) in 1827. Other pioneers were the French scientists Pierre Belon and Marie-François-Xavier Bichat. Baer, who helped popularize Christian Heinrich Pander’s 1817 discovery of primary germ layers, laid the foundations of modern comparative embryology in his landmark two-volume work Über Entwickelungsgeschichte der Thiere (1828–37; “On the Development of Animals”). Another formative publication was A Treatise on Comparative Embryology (1880–91) by the British zoologist Frances Maitland Balfour. Further research on embryonic development was conducted by the German anatomists Martin H. Rathke and Wilhelm Roux and also by the American scientist Thomas Hunt Morgan. Roux, noted for his pioneering studies on frog eggs (beginning in 1885), became the founder of experimental embryology. The principle of embryonic induction was studied by the German embryologists Hans Adolf Eduard Driesch, who furthered Roux’s research on frog eggs in the 1890s, and Hans Spemann, who was awarded a Nobel Prize in 1935. Ross G. Harrison was an American biologist noted for his work on tissue culture.