single cavity, and usually develops but a single embryo.

TWINS

Sometimes two ovules are matured at the same time. If fecundated, two

embryos instead of one will develop, producing twins. Triplets and

quadruplets, the results of the maturing of three or four ovules at

the same time, occur more rarely. As many as five children have been

born alive at a single birth, but have seldom lived for more than a

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few minutes.

GESTATION

The development of the ovule in the womb is known as gestation or

pregnancy. The process is one of continued cell division and growth,

and while it goes on the ovule sticks to the inner wall of the womb.

There it is soon enveloped by a mucous membrane, which grows around it

and incloses it.

THE EMBRYO

The _Primitive Trace_, a delicate straight line appearing on the

surface of the growing layer of cells is the base of the embryonic

spinal column. Around this the whole embryo develops in an intricate

process of cell division and duplication. One end of the Primitive

Trace becomes the head, the other the tail, for every human being has

a tail at this stage of his existence. The neck is marked by a slight

depression; the body by a swollen center. Soon little buds or "pads"

appear in the proper positions. These represent arms and legs, whose

ends, finally, split up into fingers and toes. The embryonic human

being has been steadily increasing in size, meanwhile. By the fifth

week the heart and lungs are present in a rudimentary form, and ears

and face are distinctly outlined. During the seventh week the kidneys

are formed, and a little later the genital organs. At two months,

though sex is not determined as yet, eyes and nose are visible, the

mouth is gaping, and the skin can be distinguished. At ten weeks the

sexual organs form more definitely, and in the third month sex can be

definitely determined.

THE FOETUS




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