A direct consequence of this theory of embryological origin bears on the question of species transformism. |
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It's all embryological, and who knows if and how the US will flow from the natural to the hyperreal to the sacred. |
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Haeckel noted that multicellular animal organisms follow a common pattern in early embryological development. |
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The obturator artery is very variable in origin and no embryological explanation has been found. |
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Later, Wells claimed that the embryological support for Darwinian evolution is based on the work of another 19th century embryologist, Karl von Baer. |
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One problem which arises at once is that homologous structures are often specified by non-homologous genetic systems, while it also seems difficult to establish an embryological basis for homology. |
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Although the embryological origin of parathyroid glands of tetrapods is well known, their evolutionary origin is not. |
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In fact, Darwin referred to embryological homology as the strongest single class of facts that existed to support his theories. |
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Aetiological factors and embryological constraints mean that each of the known epileptogenic lesions affects just one of these four sectors. |
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She joined our team in 2003 and is now responsible for all embryological and andrological services provided at our unit. |
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Balfour's approach was based firmly on homology of the germ layers and the ability of embryological homology to reveal phylogenetic relationships. |
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However, even the notochord would be a less fundamental criterion than aspects of embryological development and symmetry or perhaps bauplan. |
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They share the same embryological beginnings, pelvic location, aspects of innervation and passage through the levator ani. |
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In this seminar we will focus on the midline structures of the human body, the different midlines and the spine and dural tube, and their embryological origins and their dynamics. |
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Some of the most dramatic rituals of this type express a death and return to a new period of gestation and birth and often in terms that are specifically embryological or gynecological. |
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Accessory spleens are congenital and arise from the left side of the dorsal mesogastrium during the embryological period of development. |
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Data was collected from 150 cats via embryological material and the feet. |
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This helical arrangement, well known to surgeons who observe it after invagination of the long saphenous vein, appears to be related to the embryological development of the vein. |
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Settling in Heidelberg, Driesch continued to perform embryological experiments until 1909, when he was at last habilitated the procedure then required to enter the German university hierarchy in natural philosophy. |
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The urachus is an embryological structure that rarely persists in adults, but may be a site of malignancy. |
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He is cagey about revealing the details before his preliminary results are replicated and the precise pathway by which the genetic variant in question governs embryological development is nailed down. |
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Accessory nipples usually develop along the course of the embryological milk lines, which run from the anterior axillary folds to the inner thighs, but may also occur in other sites. |
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Vitanova has an embryological laboratory that is equipped with the latest devices allowing to guarantee successful treatment even in most complicated cases. |
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There is an embryological predetermination to this system. |
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Similarly this concept of unity provided a powerful impetus for embryological studies and the idea that fetal development recapitulates the steps of phylogenetic development. |
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Embryological evidence, however, shows that the animal's background color is black and the white stripes and bellies are additions. |
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