Axial Skeleton
Anatomy of Bone
Appendicular Skeleton
Physiology
Smorgasbord
100

Bones are classified by their shape...the vertebrae of the spine are classified as this shape.

What are irregular bones?

100

This cavity houses bone marrow and is located within the shaft of a long bone.

What is the medullary cavity?

100

Type of flat bone also known as the pelvis.

What is the pelvic girdle?

100

This is the process by which calcium and minerals are deposited into cartilage to form bone.

What is ossification?

100

These connect muscle to bone.

What are tendons?

200
This bone could be fractured if a foul ball at a baseball game struck you in the middle of the forehead.

What is the frontal bone?

200

This tissue could be referred to as the building block of bone.

What is cartilage?

200

This type of joint is found in your knee and elbow.

What is hinge joint?

200
Specialized cells that are essential in the bone building process that also eventually become osteocytes, or mature bone cells.

What are osteoblasts?

200

In synovial joints, this (in conjuction with articular cartilage) helps provide smooth movement at joints.

What is synovial fluid?

300

While a human body consists of 206 bones in total, only this many are found within the axial skeleton.

What is 80?

300

Periosteum covers much of the bone, except at the ends where joints are formed.  This type of cartilage covers the ends of the bones to provide smooth movement of joints.

What is articular cartilage?

300

You will find the femoral artery near this bone, which is the strongest bone found in the human body.

What is the femur?

300

This hormone is released by the Thyroid gland to trigger the absorption of calcium into the bones. 

What is calcitonin?

300

These specialized bone cells secrete acid to enlarge the medullary cavity and are responsible for breaking down bone.

What are osteoclasts?

400

These provide cushioning and absorb shock between vertebrae that have not fused together.

What are intervertebral discs?

400

This crystalline salt gives bone its compressive strength and hardness.

What are hydroxyapatites?

400

These bones are distal to the humerus and proximal to the carpals, metacarpals, and phalanges.

What are the radius and ulna?

400

These are the 5 functions of the skeletal system.

What is support, protection, storage, manufacturing, and movement?

400

These are the first and last steps of healing a broken bone.

What is a hematoma forms(first) and compact bone forms(last)?

500

Part of the vertebrae just superior to the coccyx that fuses together during adolescence.

What is the sacrum?

500

These cylindrical shaped structures (found within compact bone) consist of lamellae, Haversian canal, osteocytes and canaliculi.

What are osteons? 

(What is Haversian system?)

500

This sesamoid bone is distal to your femur and proximal to your tarsals.

What is the patella?

500

This tissue, which produces red and white blood cells, is found within the diaphysis of long bone during childhood as well as spongy bone during adulthood.

What is red bone marrow?

500

These 2 types of joints allow for little to no movement at the joint.

What are fibrous and cartilaginous joints?