Fig. 114. Section through the hind-brain of a Chick at the end of the third day of incubation.
IV. Fourth ventricle. The section shews the very thin roof and thicker sides of the ventricle. Ch. Notochord; CV. Anterior cardinal vein; CC. Involuted auditory vesicle; CC points to the end which will form the cochlear canal; RL. Recessus labyrinthi (remains of passage connecting the vesicle with the exterior); hy. Hypoblast lining the alimentary canal; AO., AOA. Aorta, and aortic arch.
During the second and third days there are formed the visceral or branchial clefts, homologous with those of the Ichthyopsida, though never developing branchial processes from their walls.
They are however real clefts or slits passing right through the walls of the throat, and are placed in series on either side across the axis of the alimentary canal, lying not quite at right angles to that axis nor parallel to each other, but converging somewhat to the middle of the throat in front ([fig. 112] and [fig. 113]).
Four in number on either side, the anterior is the first to be formed, the other three following in succession. They originate as pouches of the hypoblast, which meet the epiblast. At the junction of the epiblast and hypoblast an absorption of the tissue is effected, placing the pouches in communication with the exterior.
No sooner has a cleft been formed than its anterior border (i.e. the border nearer the head) becomes raised into a thick lip or fold, the visceral or branchial fold. Each cleft has its own fold on its anterior border, and in addition the posterior border of the fourth or last visceral cleft is raised into a similar fold. There are thus five visceral folds to four visceral clefts ([figs. 112] and [113]). The last two folds however, and especially the last, are not nearly so thick and prominent as the other three, the second being the broadest and most conspicuous of all. The first fold meets, or nearly meets, its fellow in the middle line in front, but the second falls short of reaching the middle line, and the third, fourth and fifth do so in an increasing degree. Thus in front views of the neck a triangular space with its apex directed towards the head is observed between the ends of the several folds ([fig. 113] A).
Into this space the pleuroperitoneal cavity extends, the somatopleure separating from the splanchnopleure along the ends of the folds; and it is here that the aorta plunges into the mesoblast of the body.
The history of these most important visceral folds and clefts will be dealt with in detail hereafter; meanwhile I may say that in the Chick and higher Vertebrates the first three pairs of folds are those which call for most notice.
The first fold on either side, increasing rapidly in size and prominence, does not, like the others, remain single, but sends off in the course of the third day a branch or bud-like process from its upper edge ([fig. 113]). This branch, starting from near the outer end of the fold, runs forwards and upwards in front of the stomodæum, tending to meet the corresponding branch from the fold on the other side, at a point in the middle line nearer the front of the head than the junction of the main folds ([fig. 113], sm). The two branches do not quite meet, being separated by a median process, which at the same time grows down from the extreme front of the head, and against which they abut ([fig. 120], k). Between the main folds, which are directed somewhat downwards and their branches which slant upwards, the somewhat lozenge-shaped stomodæum is placed, which, as the folds become more and more prominent, grows deeper and deeper ([fig. 120] A). The main folds form the mandibular arch, and their branches the maxillary processes, and the descending process which helps to complete the anterior margin of the stomodæum or oral cavity is called, from the parts which will be formed out of it, the frontonasal process.