ABSTRACT
The morphogenetic movements of the ectoderm during neurulation include: (1) the movements taking place within the neural plate, which becomes longer and more concentrated in a medio-lateral direction (Jacobson, 1962); and (2) those found in the lateral epidermis layer which, in an epibolic way, moves in a dorsal direction, thus exerting a pushing effect on the lateral edges of the neural plate (Lewis, 1947). The former is, to a great extent, realized by a change of form of the neuroepithelium cells, from cuboidal in early neurulae to the high columnar cells observed during later phases of neural-tube closure. In the epidermis, on the other hand, the case is the reverse. The dorsal spreading of the layer is made possible by a flattening of the cells.