what bone is this?
What is the femur
what muscle is this?
what is the triceps
The soft, spongy tissue that fills the cavities of bones and produces the cellular components of blood.
What is bone marrow?
the longest muscle in the body
sartorius
What is the easiest bone to break?
clavicle
this bone is the third and most inferior bone of the sternum
What is the xiphoid process
name the four quadricep muscles
rectus femoris, vastus lateralis, vastus medialis, and vastus intermedius
A band of tough, fibrous tissue that connect muscles to bones.
What is a tendon?
too much inversion at the ankle can cause what ligaments to sprain? name one
anterior talofibular ligament (ATFL), the posterior talofibular ligament (PTFL) and the calcaneofibular ligament (CFL)
The name of the C1 and C2 vertebrae
C1: atlas
C2: axis
What is the muscle in green?
the serratus anterior muscle
The longest bone in an adult human.
What is the femur?
Muscle tissue that moves without conscious control and is found in walls of internal organs, such as the bladder.
What are smooth muscles?
Approximately how many eggs would you have to eat to meet the protein requirement of someone who weighs 150 lbs?
hint: 0.8 grams per kilogram of body weight per day is how much protein you need a day
about 9 eggs
List five of the 10 cranial bones
There are two bicep muscles. what is the name of each, where are they located, and why are they named the way they are?
biceps brachii and biceps femoris. anterior arm and posterior leg, brachii - two heads, femoris - originates on the femur
At birth, the approximate number of bones in the human body.
What is 300 bones?
What is the strongest muscle in the body?
the masseter muscle
Name all the carpals
scaphoid, lunate, triquetrum, pisiform, hamate, capitate, trapezoid, and trapezium
a) what muscle is this
b) spell it
c) origin insertion action
a) sternocleidomastoid
b) S T E R N O C L E I D O M A S T O I D
c) origin - sternum, insertion - clavicle, action - rotation of the head to the opposite side and flexion of the neck
A disease in which bones lose an excessive amount of protein and minerals (such as calcium) and consequently lose bone mass.
What is osteoporosis?
Both teams must draw the most anatomically correct skeleton
yuh