There are several phases of the fetal heart's development. At first, the heart is just a tube. It grows so fast that it needs more space, so it bends and twists back, forming the familiar shape. During the next phase, the two atria are partly separate but there is just one big ventricle. The next phase begins when the two atria are completely separate and the ventricles are just beginning to separate. Finally, the ventricles separate completely and the heart is developed.
During the fetal heart's developmental
stages, the heart actually takes on several distinct ppearances.
These heart structures resemble other animal hearts. During phase one,
the tube-like heart is much like a fish heart. The second phase, with two
chambers, resembles a frog heart. The three-chambered phase is similar
to a snake or turtle heart. The final four-chambered heart structure distinguishes
the human heart.