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Exam 1
Exam 1

... • Write your student number in the space provided above on this page. • Check that your name and student number as printed on your answer sheet for multiple-choice questions are correct, and sign your name in the space provided to verify this. • All written responses must be in English. At the end o ...
Animal Form and Function Notes
Animal Form and Function Notes

...  Since animals are consumers, they need to eat others to survive  As with plants and other organisms, some nutrients are “essential,” meaning that the animal can’t make them itself ...
2013 - SAASTA
2013 - SAASTA

... guaranteed by eating a variety of foods. Foods rich in potassium include parsley, dried apricots, dried milk, chocolate, nuts (especially almonds), potatoes, bananas, avocados and soybeans. ...
III. Ventilation and Transport of Gases
III. Ventilation and Transport of Gases

... out of the blood into the tissue fluid. b) Oxyhemoglobin then leaves the blood and enters tissue fluid, where it is taken up by cells. c) Carbon dioxide diffuses into the blood from tissue fluid, and enters the red blood cells. d) A small amount combines with hemoglobin to form carbaminohemoglobin, ...
Blood, a more in-depth examination
Blood, a more in-depth examination

... cells would bump the walls, bang together, and form logjams that could restrict or prevent blood flow. • Flexibility. Red blood cells are very flexible and can bend and flex when entering small capillaries and branches. By changing shape, individual RBCs can squeeze through capillaries as narrow as ...
Background Information
Background Information

... a. No energy is made available to the cell for cellular functions. b. A molecule of adenosine monophosphate (AMP), with one phosphate group, is formed. c. Energy is released, which can be used by the cell. d. Energy is lost in the process. Nitrogen is found in a variety of forms in living things and ...
Waste Elimination
Waste Elimination

... Copyright Notice! This PowerPoint slide set is copyrighted by Ross Koning and is thereby preserved for all to use from plantphys.info for as long as that website is available. Images lacking photo credits are mine and, as long as you are engaged in non-profit educational missions, you have my permis ...
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... • Agranular leukocytes lack granules; their nuclei are rounded or kidney-shaped • Lymphocytes fight infections; some produce antibodies, others directly attack invaders such as bacteria or viruses • Monocytes are phagocytes that migrate from blood into tissues during an infection; they differentiate ...
Lectures for Human Body Systems: Jan 10th: Childhood health
Lectures for Human Body Systems: Jan 10th: Childhood health

... thinking, gain understanding of themselves, respect privacy, Question personal behavior and choices, always ask how it relates to their personal health and well being, impulsivity, often reckless, 18 – 20 years: Become independent, adults, seek place in society ...
Chapter 3 : The Remarkable Body
Chapter 3 : The Remarkable Body

... -Where the blood picks up oxygen and releases carbon dioxide -The blood returns to the heart where the pumping heartbeats push this oxygenated blood from the lungs to the body tissues -As blood passes through the digestive system, blood delivers oxygen and picks up most nutrients from the intestine ...
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1 I. The Unobservable-Observable Distinction (UOD) A. UOD`s

... a manner roughly analogous to that by which we now see by means of photons.” D. Van Fraassen on the UOD: 1. In his own words: “The human organism is, from the point of view of physics, a certain kind of measuring apparatus. As such it has certain limitations—which will be described in detail in the ...
Human Biology
Human Biology

... indigestibles such as fiber. They do not cause intestinal cancer. ...
Csyllabus_CHS215_MohamedFawzi_modified for students
Csyllabus_CHS215_MohamedFawzi_modified for students

... nutrition. The course covers the functions of various systems and organs in the body and studies the cell, tissues, blood vessels, digestive, respiratory, cardiovascular, urinary, endocrine, exocrine and nervous systems. Teaching strategies The course will be conducted in a form of lectures, practic ...
the body atlas - Ambrose Video
the body atlas - Ambrose Video

... Large animals generally have longer pregnancies. Humans have one of the longest, 39 weeks. Pregnancy varies little from woman to woman. ...
Sect 16-2 Blood
Sect 16-2 Blood

... is lacking. In people with hemophilia, even a minor injury can cause a life-threatening loss of blood. Most cases of hemophilia are caused by a recessive gene on the X chromosome. The disorder is expressed much more commonly in males because they have just one X chromosome. ...
In a garden bed of tomato plants, some plants were observed
In a garden bed of tomato plants, some plants were observed

... The following diagram represents the synthesis of a biomolecule. ...
Chapter 15 - Johnston Community College
Chapter 15 - Johnston Community College

... the blood, it enters red blood cells where a small amount is taken up by hemoglobin, forming carbaminohemoglobin. Most of the CO2 combines with water to form carbonic acid (H2CO3), which dissociates to release hydrogen ions (H+) and bicarbonate ions (HCO3-); the enzyme carbonic anhydrase speeds this ...
Human Body
Human Body

... by working with the bones they are attached to d. Tendons – connective tissue that attaches muscle to bone e. Skeletal muscles work in opposing pairs – as one muscle flexes, the other one relaxes (Ex. biceps and triceps) ...
Unit A: the Science of Biology
Unit A: the Science of Biology

... Cancers are caused by defects in the genes that regulate cell growth and division. These defects may be inherited or caused by viruses, or they may result from mutations in DNA produced by radiation or chemicals. 4. Why are regular medical checkups and self-examinations important? Regular medical ch ...
Biology pages:Layout 1
Biology pages:Layout 1

... Analysis and Open Ended (pp. 60–61) 24. Three important cell organelles and their functions can include the following responses: the cell membrane allows oxygen, carbon dioxide, water, and other substances to enter and leave a cell; a chloroplast uses water, carbon dioxide, and the sun’s energy to m ...
2 - Biology
2 - Biology

... blood due to injury or a medical condition. Although blood transfusions are common today, in the past they were risky, often causing fatal immune responses in the patient. It wasn't until the turn of the century that the reasons for these fatal reactions were discovered. During an immune response, t ...
Chap 22 – Gas Exchange
Chap 22 – Gas Exchange

... – Concentration of O2 much higher in air – Air requires less energy to move over respiratory surfaces. ...
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jan 2002

... smooth endoplasmic reticulum ________________________________________________ ...
Chapter 42 pulmonary only 2008
Chapter 42 pulmonary only 2008

... autonomic control.  2 regions of the brain control this: ...
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File

... Lyme disease is caused by a bacterium (Borrelia burgdorferi) that is carried by ticks. Ticks are tiny bugs, about the size of a sesame seed, which feed on blood. Different ticks bite different animals. Some ticks bite humans, but not all tick bites result in the disease. The organism that causes Lym ...
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Human genetic resistance to malaria

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