English:
Identifier: pedigreeofmanoth00haec (find matches)
Title: The pedigree of man : and other essays
Year: 1903 (1900s)
Authors: Haeckel, Ernst Heinrich Philipp August, 1834-1919
Subjects: Man Evolution Man Evolution
Publisher: London : A and H.B. Bonner
Contributing Library: ASC - York University Libraries
Digitizing Sponsor: York University - University of Toronto Libraries
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the solid frameworkof the whole canine body, consists, again, of differentkinds of bone-cells; cartilage-cells, connective-tissue-cells, that have all originated from a single primalspecies of connective-tissue-cell (Fig. 20). The redflesh or muscle that covers the bones and executesvoluntary movements is made up of very elongatedand transversely striped cells (Fig. 21). The pale yel-low muscles, on the other hand, that enter into the broader sense, this plastid theory), is grasped by no one so thoroughlyas by Rudolph Virchow. It has been applied more thoroughly byhim, especially in relation to the human organism, than by any one,and his Cellular-Pathologie laid the foundation of a new epoch inscientific medicine. See also his excellent essay Ueber die Einheits-bestrebungen in der wissentschaftlichen Medicin (GesammelteAbhandlungen, Frankfurt, 1856), and Vier Reden liber Leben undKranksein, Berlin, 18G2, especially the second discourse, Atomeund Individuen/ 124 THE DIVISION OF LABOR.
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Fig. 20. A small piece of bone, presenting nine stellate bone corpuscles,connected by radiating offshoots, and lying imbedded in theosseous ground substance. (Highly magnified).
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