Integrative Biology 131 – Lecture 02: Skeletal System

Posted on June 1st, 2010 by admin

Integrative Biology 131: General Human Anatomy. Fall 2005. Professor Marian Diamond. The functional anatomy of the human body as revealed by gross and microscopic examination.

The Department of Integrative Biology offers a program of instruction that focuses on the integration of structure and function in the evolution of diverse biological systems. It investigates integration at all levels of organization from molecules to the biosphere, and in all taxa of organisms from viruses to higher plants and animals.

The department uses many traditional fields and levels of complexity in forging new research directions, asking new questions, and answering traditional questions in new ways. The various…

Duration : 0:47:43

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What is the social systems approach to interviewing, and what themes are found in modern social systems theory?

Posted on May 31st, 2010 by admin

What is the social systems approach to interviewing, and what themes are found in modern social systems theory?

Can you please explain your question a little more in detail, I am not sure what is being asked..

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What other systems work with the muscular system to keep the body working?

Posted on May 29th, 2010 by admin

I have a HUGE project in science where we have to study the skeletal, muscular, respiratory, digestive, urinary, blood, circulatory, endocrine, immune, and nervous systems! I need answers ASAP!

The muscle make the bones move. The nerves make the impulses so the muscle contracts. The circulatory brings the blood suply to bring the oxygen to make the cells work. The endocirne cells secreate the hormones that make the cell work. The Lympth takes the waste productes away.

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Earth as a System// el nino, plate tectonics, human activity

Posted on May 28th, 2010 by admin

The uneven heating also controls weather systems. The heat absorbed by the oceans and carried by its currents is constantly being released into the atmosphere. This heat and moisture drive atmospheric circulation and set weather patterns in motion. The weather patterns then influence vegetation, as well as erosion and sediment transport.
Ever since the first photos were sent back from space, our view of Earth has changed. Remote sensing instruments, such as satellites, allow us to better understand the interrelationships between the different subsystems. For instance, recordings made by remote and Earth-based instruments show that significant surface warming has occurred over the past three decades. Knowing this, scientists are working to determine how this will affect — and already is affecting — the entire Earth system. astronomy

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Are there computerised systems that people can dial in to to see the test results of a system being developed?

Posted on May 26th, 2010 by admin

Normally an admiral has to wait till he is at sea, to see whether his systems work.

Why can’t he dial in to the test labs and see results of automated tests during the development of the systems ?

It will be given due consideration.

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Birth of the Solar System

Posted on May 24th, 2010 by admin

The Solar System’s birth was far from peaceful. Witness the spectacular explosion known as the “Big Bang”.

Naked Science: Birth of the Solar System :
TUES NOVEMBER 6 8P et/p : http://channel.nationalgeographic.com/channel/nakedscience/?source=4003

Duration : 0:2:55

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What are other systems in the human body that is related or common to the Excretory system ?

Posted on May 23rd, 2010 by admin

The excretory system contains the kidney nd the bladder nd stuff ! What are some other systems that is" interacted well" w/ the excretory system ?

Ureter

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What is the line between social systems and political systems?

Posted on May 19th, 2010 by admin

This question came to mind while reading this statement in another Q&A:

"Socialism is an economic system. Liberty has to do with the system of government, the political system, not the economic system."

How do political and economic systems interact? Can you really separate them?

In my opinion, they are one in the same.

Claiming that liberty only applies to political systems seems to be an intellectually lazy attempt to support "liberty" when it applies to lifestyle choices (gay marriage, abortion) and privacy (anti-Patriot Act etc), yet deny liberty when it applies to taxation, trade, business regulation, etc.

By attempting to separate the two, populists can restrict our basic freedom of protection of private property while still claiming to believe in and support liberty.

Milton Friedman addressed this topic in ‘Capitalism and Freedom’, and F.A. Hayek had interesting comments relevant to this topic in ‘The Road to Serfdom’ – both are must reads.

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Circulatory system

Posted on May 19th, 2010 by admin

A simple but effect animation how the heart works
Discaimer: A single copy of these materials may be reprinted for noncommercial personal use only. “Mayo,” “Mayo Clinic,” “noncommercial use only, provided you include all applicable notices and disclaimers.

Duration : 0:2:58

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What systems does the circulatory system work with and how?

Posted on May 16th, 2010 by admin

I’m doing a report on on the heart for health class and one of the required pieces of information are: How does your organ work with other body systems to keep the body healthy?
I need to know what other body systems it works with and how?

all cells need oxygen to survive
the circulatory system supplies that oxygen and carries the waste products away

if you lined up all the arteries, veins, arterioles, venules, and capillaries of your body end to end they would wrap around the world two and a half times
capillaries is one of the places where gas exchange occurs (dropping off the oxygen and picking up the carbon dioxide) for cellular metabolism to continue
look up homeostasis in wikipedia and then go to utube and watch their videos on it

the circulatory system works with all other systems
lymphatic
integumentary
skeletal
muscular
endocrine
nervous
renal
digestive
reproductive
and the respiratory system is the other place where gas exchange occurs (in the lungs)
this is where we exhale the carbon dioxide from the deoxygenated blood and when we breath in the blood is being re-oxygenated so that it can carry the oxygen to all the cells and we can maintain homeostasis

it’s very complex and i’ll probably be studying it for the rest of my life
but knowledge is power and i love the challenge
best of luck to ya

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