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Embryology literally means the study of embryos, the immature organisms contained within the coverings of an egg or within the body of the mother.
{{subpages}}
Strictly speaking, the embryonic period ends at metamorphosis, hatching, or birth.
'''Embryology''' literally means the study of embryos, the immature organisms contained within the coverings of an egg or within the body of the mother. Embryology is a field of [[biology]] that focuses on the development of new individuals from [[germ cells]].
After the [[1950s]], with the [[DNA]] structure being discovered by [[James D. Watson]] and [[Francis Crick]], and the increasing knowledge in the field of [[molecular biology]], [[developmental biology]] emerged as the field of study that correlates the genes and such morphological changes; in other words, which genes are responsible for each morphological change that takes place in an embryo, and how these genes are regulated.


==See also==
==Vertebrate embryology==
*[[Ontogeny]]
===Fertilization : The creation of the zygote===
*[[Embryogenesis]]
Instead of either of the male or female seed components containing a tiny baby, they are each just a [[cell]]. When they come together, the new cell, the fertilized egg - swells and changes. This [[zygote]] is literally the mother of all [[stem cell]]s, as it gives rise to generations of cells, any one of which - if removed from the mass of multiplying cells in the early embryo, can ''itself'' give rise to all of the different kinds of tissues in the mature organism, [[muscle]] and [[brain]], [[liver]] and [[lung]], [[bone]] and [[bone marrow]] - in fact, if conditions are right, into a complete new individual organism. When [[twins]] are identical, they arose because the zygote or very early embryo became divided, and two rather than one, baby developed from a single zygote. Fraternal twins did not arise from the same mass of cells, but from two different egg and sperm combinations making two separate zygotes that develop together in the same [[uterus]] or womb. Identical twins are natural [[clones]], where as fraternal twins are no more closely related than any two sisters, brothers, or brother and sister.
*[[Recapitulation theory]]
*[[Neuroembryology]]


==References==
===Gastrulation and the embryonic period===
* [http://embryology.med.unsw.edu.au/ UNSW Embryology] Large resource of information and media
This [[zygote]] divides continually and the cells it becomes dance out a whole extravaganza of movements. The steps of this dance are known to all vertebrates. Whether frog or mouse, human or bird, the dance is nearly the same,  right up until the basic form is created. As the cells swirl through their formations, each splits - and they all keep dividing, like the [[Sorcerer’s apprentice]], until there are thousands and then millions and then billions of cells. The dance becomes an extravaganza with whole choruses of cells moving like dancers in a scene from a greatest [[ballet]] filmed in an [[MGM musical]] with an unlimited budget.  Sheets of cells fold and flip to form an intricate tube. Troops of cells disappear to make a crevice, while another multiplying group piles into a bulge. Head to tail, the formations move to bring a shape to the vertebrate embryo.


==Further reading==
==The fetus==
* Scott F. Gilbert. ''Developmental Biology''. Sinauer, 2003. ISBN 0-87893-258-5.
* Lewis Wolpert. ''Principles of Development''. Oxford University Press, 2006. ISBN 0-19927-536-X.


{{Embryology}}
==Notes==
 
{{reflist}}[[Category:Suggestion Bot Tag]]
[[Category:Embryology|*]]
 
[[cs:Embryologie]]
[[de:Embryologie]]
[[et:Embrüoloogia]]
[[es:Embriología]]
[[eo:Embriologio]]
[[fr:Embryologie]]
[[hr:Embriologija]]
[[it:Embriologia]]
[[lt:Embriologija]]
[[nl:Embryologie]]
[[ja:発生学]]
[[pl:Embriologia]]
[[pt:Embriologia]]
[[sl:Embriologija]]
[[tl:Embriyolohiya]]
[[th:คัพภวิทยา]]
[[tr:Embriyoloji]]
[[zh:胚胎学]]
 
[[Category:CZ Live]]

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Embryology literally means the study of embryos, the immature organisms contained within the coverings of an egg or within the body of the mother. Embryology is a field of biology that focuses on the development of new individuals from germ cells.

Vertebrate embryology

Fertilization : The creation of the zygote

Instead of either of the male or female seed components containing a tiny baby, they are each just a cell. When they come together, the new cell, the fertilized egg - swells and changes. This zygote is literally the mother of all stem cells, as it gives rise to generations of cells, any one of which - if removed from the mass of multiplying cells in the early embryo, can itself give rise to all of the different kinds of tissues in the mature organism, muscle and brain, liver and lung, bone and bone marrow - in fact, if conditions are right, into a complete new individual organism. When twins are identical, they arose because the zygote or very early embryo became divided, and two rather than one, baby developed from a single zygote. Fraternal twins did not arise from the same mass of cells, but from two different egg and sperm combinations making two separate zygotes that develop together in the same uterus or womb. Identical twins are natural clones, where as fraternal twins are no more closely related than any two sisters, brothers, or brother and sister.

Gastrulation and the embryonic period

This zygote divides continually and the cells it becomes dance out a whole extravaganza of movements. The steps of this dance are known to all vertebrates. Whether frog or mouse, human or bird, the dance is nearly the same, right up until the basic form is created. As the cells swirl through their formations, each splits - and they all keep dividing, like the Sorcerer’s apprentice, until there are thousands and then millions and then billions of cells. The dance becomes an extravaganza with whole choruses of cells moving like dancers in a scene from a greatest ballet filmed in an MGM musical with an unlimited budget. Sheets of cells fold and flip to form an intricate tube. Troops of cells disappear to make a crevice, while another multiplying group piles into a bulge. Head to tail, the formations move to bring a shape to the vertebrate embryo.

The fetus

Notes