Descriptions of the creation of the blood vessels easily lend themselves to explanations via electromagnetic vortex fields.
Vascular Morphogenesis and the Formation of Vascular Networks – Simon
https://doi.org/10.1016/S1534-5807(04)00106-6
In the illustration below, the process of vascular development is easily interpreted as the progression of vortex templates from single vortices to vascular tube.

- Elongated vortices (endothelial cells) develop a North-South dipole and self-organise according to magnetic forces, with North poles attracting South to form a chain.
- Energy continues to accumulate leading to fractalisation and sub-vortices which lead to the formation of cytoplasmic vesicles.
- These new vesicles again orient along the magnetic field lines and continue to accumulate energy. They grow in size and elongate in accordance with the ambient field conditions.
- The vortex principle (centripetal flow) moves the new vesicles towards the centre of the whole chain where they merge to form a cylinder at the inner radius of the tube.
- Energy continues to accumulate at this radius and is available for maintenance, repair and possible contributions to blood flow. Evidence for this is that the blood starts to flow before the heart has formed and it must therefore be acquiring energy from somewhere else: The Heart is not a Pump
See also: The morphogenesis of capillaries
See also: Mitosis and field vortices