Sprague-Dawley rats were malnourished by giving their mothers an 8% casein diet starting at day 10 of gestation, while controls were fed a 24% casein diet. Starting at postnatal day 20 (P20), rehabilitation of the malnourished animals was attempted by: (1) feeding both mother and young a 24% casein diet, (2) leaving the pups with their mothers until they were 40 days old, and (3) reducing the litter size from 8 to 4 pups. Observations were made on aldehyde-perfused tissue from animals 20, 40 and 70 days old. The somatosensory cortex from one hemisphere was embedded in Araldite, and that from the other side was processed for Golgi staining. At 20 days of age the body weight of the malnourished animals was 21% that of the controls, but at 70 days it was no longer different. The anterior-posterior length, the width, and the height of the cerebral hemispheres were also significantly reduced at P20, but the differences had disappeared by P70. The thickness of area 3 of the cerebral cortex was measured in 1 μm sections. It was significantly reduced in the malnourished animals at P20, but at P40, following rehabilitation, the difference was no longer statistically significant. In tangential 1 μm sections the fraction of the volume of tissue occupied by neuropil was measured in layers II through IV. At P20 it was significantly reduced only in the upper half of layers II/III of the malnourished animals; at P40 this difference was no longer present. The mean volume of upper layer II/III cell bodies was estimated and found to be significantly reduced in the experimental animals at P20 but not at P40. In the Golgi preparations, pyramidal cells in upper layer II/III were studied. Their estimated volume, as well as the thickness of their basal dendrites, was significantly reduced in the 20 day malnourished animals, but not in the rehabilitated animals. These results show that animals severely malnourished until 20 days of age can reach normal body weight and attain cerebral hemispheres of normal size when proper nutrition is provided. The effects of malnutrition on the cerebral cortex of these animals are most apparent in upper layer II/III which, during the time of nutritional restriction, is the least developed of the cortical layers. However, when proper nutrition is provided, the cerebral cortex may attain normal morphology. © 1979.