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Chapter 19. Development and Inheritance

19.0 Introduction

This photograph shows a newborn baby.
Figure 19.0 – Newborn: A single fertilized egg develops over the span of nine months into an infant consisting of trillions of cells and capable of surviving outside the womb. (credit: “Seattleye”/flickr.com)

Chapter Objectives

By the end of this chapter, you will be able to:

  • list and explain the steps involved in fertilization;
  • describe the major events in embryonic development;
  • describe the major events in fetal development;
  • discuss the adaptations of a woman’s body to pregnancy;
  • describe the physiologic adjustments that the newborn must make in the first hours of extrauterine life;
  • summarize the physiology of lactation; and
  • classify and describe the different patterns of inheritance.

In approximately nine months, a single cell—a fertilized egg—develops into a fully formed infant consisting of trillions of cells with myriad specialized functions. The dramatic changes of fertilization, embryonic development, and fetal development are followed by remarkable adaptations of the newborn to life outside the womb. An offspring’s normal development depends upon the appropriate synthesis of structural and functional proteins. This, in turn, is governed by the genetic material inherited from the parental egg and sperm, as well as environmental factors.


This work, Human Physiology, is adapted from Anatomy & Physiology by OpenStax, licensed under CC BY. This edition, with revised content and artwork, is licensed under CC BY-SA except where otherwise noted.

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Human Physiology Copyright © by Leslie Bach, Nour Al-muhtasib, Leslie King, and Nicole Thometz is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License, except where otherwise noted.

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