foundations of biology and cells
tissues, skeleton, muscles
nervous system and brain
blood, heart, circulation
breathing, hormones, kidneys
100

This term refers to the study of living things.

What is biology?

100

These four basic tissue types make up the human body [need to name all four!!!!]

What are epithelial, connective, muscle, and nervous tissue?

100

These four lobes make up the cerebrum: frontal, parietal, temporal, and this.

What is the occipital lobe?

100

These cells carry oxygen and have a lifespan of ~120 days in adults.

red blood cells

100

This gas makes up about 21% of the air we breathe and is essential for cellular respiration.

What is oxygen?

200

These are the basic characteristics shared by all living things, including growth, reproduction, and response to stimuli.
 

What are the characteristics of life?

200

These are the four major classifications of bones: long, short, flat, and this final category.

What are irregular bones?

200

This insulating layer around neurons speeds up nerve impulses.

What is the myelin sheath?

200

Plasma, red blood cells, white blood cells, and platelets make up this bodily fluid.

What is blood?

200

These chemical messengers travel through the blood to regulate body functions.

What are hormones?

300

This widely accepted theory states that all living things are made of cells, and all cells come from preexisting cells.

What is the cell theory?

300

This type of bone marrow makes blood cells; the other type stores fat.

What is red bone marrow? (yellow stores fat)

300

These electrical signals travel down a neuron to transmit information.

What are nerve impulses (action potentials)?

300

People with this blood type are universal donors because their RBCs have no A or B antigens.

What is type O?

300

This deadly gas binds to hemoglobin more strongly than oxygen, preventing oxygen transport.

What is carbon monoxide?

400

This molecule type forms the main structure of cell membranes, with a hydrophilic head and hydrophobic tails.

What are phospholipids?

400

This happens to joints when the cartilage wears down, causing pain and reduced mobility.

What is arthritis or joint degeneration?

400

This lobe is primarily responsible for vision processing.

occipital

400

This term describes the amount of blood pumped by the heart per minute.

What is cardiac output?

400

This pathway describes how urine travels from kidneys → ureters → bladder → urethra.

What is the urinary tract pathway?

500

This monosaccharide is the main energy source of the cell and the breakdown product of carbohydrates.

What is glucose?

500

Muscles work in this type of paired relationship, where one contracts while the other relaxes.

What are opposing (antagonistic) muscle groups?

500

This part of the nervous system sends signals to muscles to initiate contraction.

What are motor neurons?

500

This system returns excess fluid to the bloodstream and contains organs like the spleen and lymph nodes.

What is the lymphatic system?

500

These paired organs maintain homeostasis by regulating blood pH, water balance, and waste removal.

What are the kidneys?