The Worms - KCI-SBI3U
... • A single segment can be damaged, but the other segments can continue to function properly • Mobility is more effective because segments move independently ...
... • A single segment can be damaged, but the other segments can continue to function properly • Mobility is more effective because segments move independently ...
Introduction to Animals
... Bilateral Symmetry-A body design in which there are distinct right and left halves. In Bilateral Symmetry there are ...
... Bilateral Symmetry-A body design in which there are distinct right and left halves. In Bilateral Symmetry there are ...
Nemertea
... • Flatworms move by waving hair on their skin to propel themselves forward. • They also move by contracting their muscles. • Flatworm reproduction is hermaphroditic- each individual produces eggs and sperm. • When two flatworms mate, they exchange sperm so both become fertilized. ...
... • Flatworms move by waving hair on their skin to propel themselves forward. • They also move by contracting their muscles. • Flatworm reproduction is hermaphroditic- each individual produces eggs and sperm. • When two flatworms mate, they exchange sperm so both become fertilized. ...
Medical Technology Equipment
... PACS/Picture Archiving and Communication Technologies These IT-based products improve the speed and consistency of image communication within the radiology department and throughout an enterprise. When integrated with RIS, it creates a single powerful work flow engine that allows radiologists to acc ...
... PACS/Picture Archiving and Communication Technologies These IT-based products improve the speed and consistency of image communication within the radiology department and throughout an enterprise. When integrated with RIS, it creates a single powerful work flow engine that allows radiologists to acc ...
Invertebrate Zoology Lecture 2, March 31, 1999
... Sometimes grouped with Arthropoda; connection supported by molecular evidence. ...
... Sometimes grouped with Arthropoda; connection supported by molecular evidence. ...
ANATOMICAL TERMINOLOGY: Directional Terms
... The large intestine is __________________________to the stomach. The hamstrings are located _______________________to the quadriceps. The brain is ___________________________to the heart. The index finger is ____________________to the thumb and middle finger. The liver is _____________________to the ...
... The large intestine is __________________________to the stomach. The hamstrings are located _______________________to the quadriceps. The brain is ___________________________to the heart. The index finger is ____________________to the thumb and middle finger. The liver is _____________________to the ...
Organs
... (5oz). The compressed tubes inside stretch, when extended, to over 80km (50 miles). The kidneys are not in the small of the back, but much higher behind the 12th ribs. Heart A hollow muscular organ found in the chest, left of the space between the 5th and 8th ribs. The heart has 4 chambers: the left ...
... (5oz). The compressed tubes inside stretch, when extended, to over 80km (50 miles). The kidneys are not in the small of the back, but much higher behind the 12th ribs. Heart A hollow muscular organ found in the chest, left of the space between the 5th and 8th ribs. The heart has 4 chambers: the left ...
FORENSIC SCIENCE Biology
... Gender Differences (cont) The ribcage and shoulders of males are generally wider and larger than that of females. In addition, about one person in twenty has an extra rib. This is more common in males than in females. ...
... Gender Differences (cont) The ribcage and shoulders of males are generally wider and larger than that of females. In addition, about one person in twenty has an extra rib. This is more common in males than in females. ...
Body Cavities
... defect but it does not arise from a failure in body wall closure. Instead, it originates when portions of the gut tube (the midgut), that normally herniates into the umbilical cord during the 6th to 10th weeks fails to return to the abdominal cavity. ...
... defect but it does not arise from a failure in body wall closure. Instead, it originates when portions of the gut tube (the midgut), that normally herniates into the umbilical cord during the 6th to 10th weeks fails to return to the abdominal cavity. ...
Human Body Letter
... Dear Faithful Employee of the Human Body Corporation: It is with sincere regret that I must inform you that your employment as an organ of the Human Body Corporation is on the verge of termination. Due to recent cost increases, the corporation’s financial manager is considering firing of one of the ...
... Dear Faithful Employee of the Human Body Corporation: It is with sincere regret that I must inform you that your employment as an organ of the Human Body Corporation is on the verge of termination. Due to recent cost increases, the corporation’s financial manager is considering firing of one of the ...
The Animal Kingdom
... around a central axis and radiate from the central core like the spokes of a wheel exhibit radial symmetry. (Think of an orange.) 3. Organisms whose body parts are arranged along a longitudinal axis where right and left half are mirror images of each other exhibit bilaterial symmetry. (Think of a bu ...
... around a central axis and radiate from the central core like the spokes of a wheel exhibit radial symmetry. (Think of an orange.) 3. Organisms whose body parts are arranged along a longitudinal axis where right and left half are mirror images of each other exhibit bilaterial symmetry. (Think of a bu ...
Chapter 19: The Animal Body and How It Moves
... •Thoracic cavity – Heart and lungs •Abdominal cavity – Stomach and intestines •Body is supported by a skeleton made up of jointed bones •The skull protects the brain •The vertebral column protects the spinal cord •Tissues –Cells of the same type are organized into tissues –Tissues form as the verteb ...
... •Thoracic cavity – Heart and lungs •Abdominal cavity – Stomach and intestines •Body is supported by a skeleton made up of jointed bones •The skull protects the brain •The vertebral column protects the spinal cord •Tissues –Cells of the same type are organized into tissues –Tissues form as the verteb ...
1 THE FIRST MOSCOW STATE MEDICAL UNIVERSITY NAMED
... body of perceived knowledge when solving the task. The knowledge has been demonstrated against the background of interdisciplinary links, the diagnosis is convincing, adequate components of the patient's treatment strategy have been suggested. The answer has a clear structure, the definitions are gi ...
... body of perceived knowledge when solving the task. The knowledge has been demonstrated against the background of interdisciplinary links, the diagnosis is convincing, adequate components of the patient's treatment strategy have been suggested. The answer has a clear structure, the definitions are gi ...
Forensic science - Environmental-Chemistry
... Forensic Entomology: The study of insects and their relation and their relation to a criminal investigation. Forensic Psychiatry: It is a specialized area in which the relationship between human behavior and legal proceedings is examined. They examine behavioral patterns of criminals as an aid inn d ...
... Forensic Entomology: The study of insects and their relation and their relation to a criminal investigation. Forensic Psychiatry: It is a specialized area in which the relationship between human behavior and legal proceedings is examined. They examine behavioral patterns of criminals as an aid inn d ...
review_for_test - Bonar Law Memorial
... have tissues and organs but no coelom bilateral symmetry with cephalization have pharynx to pump food into gut have flame cells to remove waste have ganglia and eyespots many are hermaphrodites reproduce sexually or asexually ...
... have tissues and organs but no coelom bilateral symmetry with cephalization have pharynx to pump food into gut have flame cells to remove waste have ganglia and eyespots many are hermaphrodites reproduce sexually or asexually ...
1.2--POWERPOINT--History of Forensics
... Part IV: Late 19th-Century Progress • Alphonse Bertillon = French scientist • 1897: applied anthropology/morphology to first system of personal identification • known as anthropometry • involved taking a series of body measurements to distinguish one person from another • replaced by finger-printing ...
... Part IV: Late 19th-Century Progress • Alphonse Bertillon = French scientist • 1897: applied anthropology/morphology to first system of personal identification • known as anthropometry • involved taking a series of body measurements to distinguish one person from another • replaced by finger-printing ...
Blood Vessels of the Fetal Pig Dissection
... around the blood vessels. Use your probes or the tweezers to clean off the vessels so that you can trace them from the heart out into the body. 5. Identify these veins that drain the anterior portion of the fetal pig: a. The superior vena cava is the large vessel entering the heart from above. The i ...
... around the blood vessels. Use your probes or the tweezers to clean off the vessels so that you can trace them from the heart out into the body. 5. Identify these veins that drain the anterior portion of the fetal pig: a. The superior vena cava is the large vessel entering the heart from above. The i ...
REVISION: INVERTEBRATES 26 MARCH 2014
... follow the letter. The point where various phyla differ from each other is indicated by the branching off / split into new phyla. ...
... follow the letter. The point where various phyla differ from each other is indicated by the branching off / split into new phyla. ...
Echinoderms and Chordates
... o The four distinctive chordate characteristics are present in simple form. o Pharyngeal slits used to trap food o Simple sense organs o Separate sexes with external fertilization o Branchiostoma is the most well studied in this group Allows for research into origins of vertebrate organisms Subphy ...
... o The four distinctive chordate characteristics are present in simple form. o Pharyngeal slits used to trap food o Simple sense organs o Separate sexes with external fertilization o Branchiostoma is the most well studied in this group Allows for research into origins of vertebrate organisms Subphy ...
Anatomical positions, Anatomical Planes, Terms of position
... Medial indicates a structure nearer to the median plane of the body. For example, 5th digit of the hand (little finger) is medial to other digits. Lateral stipulates a structure is away Rostral used instead of anterior when describing parts of the brain, means towards the rostrum. In humans, it deno ...
... Medial indicates a structure nearer to the median plane of the body. For example, 5th digit of the hand (little finger) is medial to other digits. Lateral stipulates a structure is away Rostral used instead of anterior when describing parts of the brain, means towards the rostrum. In humans, it deno ...
Anatomy of the Parasympathetic (Craniosacral) Division
... The nerve fibers that constitute the parasympathetic division originate at the two anatomical ends of the central nervous system. The cranial nerves, CN III, CN VII, CN IX and CN X and the sacral spinal nerves S2, S3 and S4 carry the presynaptic (or, pre-ganglionic) parasympathetic outflow. The pres ...
... The nerve fibers that constitute the parasympathetic division originate at the two anatomical ends of the central nervous system. The cranial nerves, CN III, CN VII, CN IX and CN X and the sacral spinal nerves S2, S3 and S4 carry the presynaptic (or, pre-ganglionic) parasympathetic outflow. The pres ...
Autopsy
An autopsy—also known as a post-mortem examination, necropsy, autopsia cadaverum, or obduction—is a highly specialized surgical procedure that consists of a thorough examination of a corpse to determine the cause and manner of death and to evaluate any disease or injury that may be present. It is usually performed by a specialized medical doctor called a pathologist.The word “autopsy” means to study and directly observe the body (Adkins and Barnes, 317). This includes an external examination of the deceased and the removal and dissection of the brain, kidneys, lungs and heart. When a coroner receives a body, he or she must first review the circumstances of the death and all evidence, then decide what type of autopsy should be performed if any. If an autopsy is recommended, the coroner can choose between an external autopsy (the deceased is examined, fingerprinted, and photographed but not opened; blood and fluid samples are taken), an external and partial internal autopsy (the deceased is opened but only affected organs are removed and examined), or a full external and internal autopsy.Autopsies are performed for either legal or medical purposes. For example, a forensic autopsy is carried out when the cause of death may be a criminal matter, while a clinical or academic autopsy is performed to find the medical cause of death and is used in cases of unknown or uncertain death, or for research purposes. Autopsies can be further classified into cases where external examination suffices, and those where the body is dissected and internal examination is conducted. Permission from next of kin may be required for internal autopsy in some cases. Once an internal autopsy is complete the body is reconstituted by sewing it back together.