Two-dimensional gel analysis of the bacteriophage T4 ori(uvsY) region revealed a novel comet on the Y arc. This comet contains simple Y molecules in which the branch points map to the ori(uvsY) transcript region. The comet depends on the the origin and DNA synthesis and is abolished by a mutation that reduces replication without affecting transcription. These results argue that the branched molecules are intermediates in replication initiation. A transcriptional terminator, cloned just downstream of the origin promoter, shortened the tail of the comet. Therefore, the location of the transcript determines the DNA branch points. We conclude that the comet DNA consists of intermediates in which unidirectional replication has been triggered by priming from the RNA of the origin R loop.