Originally published in 1928 as part of the Cambridge Comparative
Physiology series, this book examines the importance of cilia in
the lives of many invertebrate animals. Gray demonstrates how
cilia, not muscle fibres, often play the dominant role as organs of
contraction and locomotion and explains how ciliated surfaces are
co-ordinated. This book will be of value to anyone with an interest
in the history of science.
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