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Digital Necropsy of a Bottlenose Dolphin
Digital Necropsy of a Bottlenose Dolphin

... Dolphin’s echolocation abilities. These include reduced cheek-bones and expanded middle ear cavity. The head also contains all of the important equipment for echolocation, such as the melon and air sacs of the upper nasal passages. ...
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... called GAA. When you don’t have enough GAA in your body, then your body stores too much glycogen, which is a form of sugar (glucose) that is stored in the lysosomes in your muscle cells. One important thing to realize is the Pompe impacts each person who has it differently. Often, the symptoms vary ...
Appendicular Skeleton •The appendicular skeleton includes the bones of
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Amphioxis

... nerve cord (neurocoel) is expanded anteriorly to form a vesicle sometimes referred to as the brain. Ventral to the nerve cord is the notochord. It is longer, relative to the length of the body, in these animals than in any other chordate. It is longer than the nerve cord and extends well into the ro ...
Biology 11
Biology 11

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Vertebral Column and Thorax
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Anatomical terminology



Anatomical terminology is used by anatomists and zoologists, in scientific journals, textbooks, and by doctors and other health professionals. Anatomical terminology contains a variety of unique and possibly confusing terms to describe the anatomical location and action of different structures. By using this terminology, anatomists hope to be more precise and reduce errors and ambiguity. For example, is a scar ""above the wrist"" located on the forearm two or three inches away from the hand? Or is it at the base of the hand? Is it on the palm-side or back-side? By using precise anatomical terminology, ambiguity is eliminated.Anatomical terms derive from Ancient Greek and Latin words, and because these languages are no longer used in everyday conversation, the meaning of their words does not change. The current international standard is the Terminologia Anatomica.
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