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Annelid Worksheet
Annelid Worksheet

... _____ 7. Earthworms have an open circulatory system. _____ 8. The crop of an earthworm is a sac used for storage. _____ 9. Mollusks and segmented worms probably share a common ancestor. _____ 10. The earthworm intestine is called a setae. _____ 11. Leeches secrete a substance to keep blood from clot ...
Muscles of Back
Muscles of Back

...  Extension: bending backwards  Lateral flexion: bending side-wards  Rotation: Twisting the trunk  Circumduction: The axis of movement passes through the center of the vertebral bodies, so that the bodies do not move. Movements are mostly permitted by the cervical & lumbar spines. Thicker the int ...
NAME
NAME

... moved to his groin. Suspecting that the patient is passing a ureteric calculus (stone), the physician ordered an intravenous pyelogram (IVP). In interpreting the pyelogram, she recalled that all of the following statements about the ureter are correct EXCEPT that A. at the hilus of the kidney, the p ...
SPINAL NERVES
SPINAL NERVES

... Innervate a narrow strip of skin and muscle along the back at the level where the ramus leaves the spinal nerve ...
Zoology Exercise #10: Phylum Nematoda Lab Guide All animals
Zoology Exercise #10: Phylum Nematoda Lab Guide All animals

... The females reproductive system fills most of the pseudocoel. The system is a Y-shaped set of tubes. The short base of the Y is the vagina. It opens to the outside at the vulva. The long tubes of the inverted Y are the uteri. They extend to the posterior end and then double back as more slender, muc ...
Human Body: End of Year Review [518071] Student Class Date 1
Human Body: End of Year Review [518071] Student Class Date 1

... 7. Which biological activity occurs in a repeated rhythm? A. sneezing B. coughing C. breathing D. blinking ...
Chap 7 part 2
Chap 7 part 2

... protists that are the closest living relatives of animals. ...
Bird Dissection
Bird Dissection

... the syrinx. The syrinx, an organ found only in birds, is the organ from which birds produce their various calls and songs. 32. Trace the synrix down to its base, where it divides into two smaller tubes called bronchi. Each bronchus leads to a lung. The lungs are relatively small organs. 33. Look fo ...
Anatomy of the Heart Definitions
Anatomy of the Heart Definitions

... Anatomy of the Heart Definitions The heart is the size of your fist and it is located on the left side of your chest. The heart is divided into four chambers. Right Atrium The right atrium receives de-oxygenated blood from the body through the superior vena cava (head and upper body) and inferior ve ...
Respiratory System
Respiratory System

... Carilage arranged in boxlike structure; Adam’s Apple Attached to vocal cords and muscles of the throat Epiglottis protects food from trachea by closing over it during swallowing ...
Body Systems Notes
Body Systems Notes

... •works with muscles to allow movement •makes blood cells ...
Invertebrates07
Invertebrates07

... KINGDOM ANIMALIA ...
Human Body Systems
Human Body Systems

... blood vessels and nerves. • Bones are made of several layers – periosteum, compact bone, and spongy bone. • A joint is where two bones meet. • Joints can be cartilagenous (spine), ball-and-socket (shoulders and hips), pivot (neck), gliding (wrists), and hinged (fingers, elbows, and knees). ...
Unit 1 Introduction to the Human Body
Unit 1 Introduction to the Human Body

... make note of the three body planes. ...
Glenohumeral Articulation
Glenohumeral Articulation

... Circumduction is merely a combination of the first two movements in a specific sequence. Movements at the shoulder joint are accompanied by movements of the scapula on the thoracic wall and by subsequent movements of the Clavicle. (Thoracohumeral articulation) Analysis of the movements: Abduction: I ...
Thyroarytenoid muscle
Thyroarytenoid muscle

... Avoid excessive injection of local anesthetic to allow continued palpation of structures after injection. If tracheotomy is present, it is usually necessary to remove it for access for needle placement. Perform only on patients able to tolerate short-term removal of tracheotomy tube. May use nasal s ...
Answers
Answers

... foramen, the nerve to the stapedius muscle and chorda tympani will be spared. If the lesion is due to inflammation of the nerve within the facial canal (most common cause), involvement of these nerves leads to hyperacusis and loss of taste over the anterior 2/3 of the tongue. An acoustic neuroma or ...
SSN Anatomy #2
SSN Anatomy #2

... Ask the patient to stick out his/her tongue. The tongue will deviate to the side of the nerve with the lesion (b/c of unilateral paralysis of the genioglossus muscle, which protracts the tongue). 11. All of the “glossus” muscles are innervated by the hypoglossal nerve (CN XII) except ________, which ...
Nerve Structure
Nerve Structure

... o Innervate a narrow strip of skin and muscle along the back at the level where the ramus leaves the spinal nerve Ventral rami o Those in the thoracic region are called intercostal nerves o Innervate a narrow strip of muscle and skin on the sides, chest, ribs and abdominal wall o In other regions, t ...
The Thorax - Fisiokinesiterapia
The Thorax - Fisiokinesiterapia

... Neurovascular Bundle of Intercostal Muscles  VAN (vein, artery, nerve) ...
A BASIC OVERVIEW OF VOICE PRODUCTION.revised
A BASIC OVERVIEW OF VOICE PRODUCTION.revised

... Sound is produced by air passing through the larynx on the way to the lungs, causing the walls of the larynx to vibrate. The pitch of the sound that is produced can be altered by the pull of muscles, which changes the tension of the vocal cords. Also ...
The Axial Skeleton •The basic features of the human skeleton have
The Axial Skeleton •The basic features of the human skeleton have

... •Ribs 8-12 are called false ribs because they don’t attach directly to the sternum. •The costal cartilage of ribs 8-10 (vertebrochondral ribs) fuse together with the costal cartilage of rib pair 7 before connecting to the sternum. •The last two pairs of ribs 11-12 are called floating ribs because th ...
What are the parts and functions of the skeletal system?
What are the parts and functions of the skeletal system?

... Humans have 33 Humans and giraffes have the same number of bones in their necks. Giraffe neck vertebrae are just much, much longer! ...
The Skeletal System Vertebral Column and Thorax
The Skeletal System Vertebral Column and Thorax

... – Most common in individuals who have an injury, such as spinal cord injury, that results in neurologic deficits ...
Homeostasis, Levels of Organization of Living Things, Skeletal
Homeostasis, Levels of Organization of Living Things, Skeletal

... 18. List and explain the 5 jobs of the circulatory system (2 points each) 1. Blood carries food, water, and oxygen to all of the cells in the body. 2. Blood removes waste from all of the cells of the body. 3. Blood helps to maintain our body temperature. 4. White blood cells in blood helps to fight ...
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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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