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The start of life
Human life begins after a sperm fertilizes an egg
and the egg develops in the uterus (the womb).
A fertilized human egg takes about nine months to
grow into a baby ready for birth. In the uterus, the
fetus depends on the placenta (the tissue that links
the mother’s and fetus’s blood) for all its needs.
FERTILIZATION
Millions of sperm swim toward the egg,
propelled forward by flexible tails, but usually
only one will fertilize it. On contact, the sperm
and egg merge to create a single cell—the
fertilized egg. The cell then begins to divide.
OThis is a scan of a fetus inside the womb,
taken between four and six months into
pregnancy. It was produced using sound waves
to form a picture, which was then turned into a
three-dimensional (3-D) image. 3-D scans first
appeared in 1987.
1 WITHIN 36 HOURS the
fertilized egg has divided into two
cells. Twelve hours later it has
divided into four cells, and so on.
REPRODUCTIVE ORGANS
Women have two ovaries (A), where eggs,
or ova, are stored, and a uterus (B), where
a baby is nourished and grows until birth.
Men have two testes (C), where sperm are
made. They also have a penis (D) through
which the sperm travel to get to the eggs.
2 THREE TO FOUR DAYS
after fertilization, there is a cluster
of 16 to 32 cells. The cluster enters
the uterus.
3 ABOUT SIX DAYS after
fertilization, the cell cluster forms
a hollow cavity. It attaches itself
to the lining of the uterus with
rootlike growths.
4 ABOUT EIGHT DAYS after
fertilization, an embryo begins to
form. New cells will form tissues
and organs as a baby develops.
After an egg is
fertilized it begins
to form a barrier
to other sperm.
Each sperm has a
rounded head and
a long tail.
ULTRASOUND SCAN
D
A
B
C
A
C
THE HUMAN BODY