How Life Begins: The Science of Life in the WombIn How Life Begins, science journalist Chris Vaughan provides you with a fascinating glimpse of fetal development through the advancement of medical technology and interviews with leading researchers. He goes beyond the usual information in books for expectant parents. For those of you who want to know more than how fast the fetus is growing, when it will start to move, and how much more weight Mommy is going to gain, here is a month-by-month guide to what your new baby is seeing, hearing, dreaming about, and how it's accomplishing the miracle of preparing to be human. As Chris Vaughan says in his prologue, "Life in the womb is a journey that we have all taken but forgotten, a period that links our present to the whole history of life on earth, a time that shapes our lives and perceptions into adulthood". What this book is about, and what scientists are discovering, was penned in a prescient phrase by the poet Samuel Taylor Coleridge: "The history of man for the nine months preceding his birth would probably be far more interesting, and contain events of greater moment, than all the three score and ten years that follow it". How Life Begins focuses on the experience of the embryo and fetus, and provides an entertaining and informative guide to the long and fascinating journey from single cell to plump and bright-eyed baby. |
From inside the book
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Page 102
... scientists could learn how the fetus fuses sheets of folding tissue without leaving a mark . Eventually , some researchers hope , primitive cells might be exposed to the precise se- quence of chemicals necessary to make them bud into ...
... scientists could learn how the fetus fuses sheets of folding tissue without leaving a mark . Eventually , some researchers hope , primitive cells might be exposed to the precise se- quence of chemicals necessary to make them bud into ...
Page 120
... scientists who previously opposed such research have begun to agree with much of it , even as they continue to voice con- cerns about the application of the information . Other scientists continue to oppose behavioral genet- ics ...
... scientists who previously opposed such research have begun to agree with much of it , even as they continue to voice con- cerns about the application of the information . Other scientists continue to oppose behavioral genet- ics ...
Page 217
... scientists a new view of the fetus , says Dr. Henrique Rigatto , who studies fetal breath- ing at the University of Manitoba , Winnipeg . " Before this , scientists generally saw fetal development as a passive process , " Rigatto says ...
... scientists a new view of the fetus , says Dr. Henrique Rigatto , who studies fetal breath- ing at the University of Manitoba , Winnipeg . " Before this , scientists generally saw fetal development as a passive process , " Rigatto says ...
Contents
BIRTH | 3 |
SEX AND THE SINGLE CELL | 16 |
WHOS WALKING WHOM? | 46 |
Copyright | |
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able Accutane activity adults amniotic fluid amniotic sac animals baby baby's bacteria become begins behavior birth blood bloodstream body born boys breathing called cervix chemical child chromosome connections contractions cord create doctors dreams embryo estrogen eyes fallopian tubes feel female fertilization fetal fetus folding genes genetic girls grow growth happens heart homeobox human hypothalamus identical twins immune system implantation infants intestines labor layer limbs look lungs male molecules mother movement Müllerian duct muscles natural killer cells nerve cells nerve signals neural neurons newborn organs oxygen oxytocin parents percent placenta preembryo preemie preg pregnancy premature prenatal progesterone proteins pups release REM sleep result scientists seems sexual shape skin sounds sperm stress hormones suppressor cells surfactant survive tiny tion tissue trimester uterus week after LMP womb women Y chromosome yolk sac