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DallasBryan
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Topic: Anatomy 101 Posted: February 11 2005 at 12:43 |
concerning the human anatomy, what is its largest
organ?
hint 1/ some have bigger ones than others.
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mirco
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Posted: February 11 2005 at 12:54 |
As I studied in high school, the skin (if you consider it an organ)...
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Please forgive me for my crappy english!
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Metropolis
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Posted: February 11 2005 at 12:58 |
Nah, dont think it counts, it is after all the intugementary SYSTEM (not organ ).
Do you mean biggest in size or mass?
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tuxon
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Posted: February 11 2005 at 13:05 |
The mind. i keep mine crystal clear.
and what would be the strongest muscle?
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Garion81
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Posted: February 11 2005 at 13:09 |
tuxon wrote:
The mind. i keep mine crystal clear.
and what would be the strongest muscle?
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For some it would be one and the same.
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"What are you going to do when that damn thing rusts?"
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mirco
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Posted: February 11 2005 at 13:12 |
Human beings can survive without being able to see, hear or smell. And Professor Norbert Pallua, plastic surgeon at the University Hospital for Plastic, Hand and Burn Surgery in Aachen / Germany, says that this is still the case “when 80 per cent of their body surface has been burned. On the condition that the degree of burning is such that treatment is possible, i.e. large areas of the skin are not damaged too deeply and replacement skin can be transplanted successfully.” Human beings cannot, however, survive without their skin to protect them, without their organic outer packaging. Mother Nature did an excellent job when providing human beings with a viable "wrapper". The results represent a marvellous evolutionary engineering performance. The skin surface of an adult of average size has a total area of about two square metres (seven square metres if the mucous membranes are included) and accounts for about 16 per cent of total body weight. This means that skin is the biggest human organ.
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I rest my case...
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Please forgive me for my crappy english!
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tuxon
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Posted: February 11 2005 at 13:21 |
A church organ is bigger than a harpsichord
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Metropolis
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Posted: February 11 2005 at 13:24 |
actually yeah, i change my mind, i'll go with skin
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Certif1ed
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Posted: February 11 2005 at 13:30 |
Skin.
Up.
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DallasBryan
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Posted: February 11 2005 at 13:37 |
mirco you rocket scientist, you are correct on the first
entry. Brilliant!!!
the heart is a muscle, why does it beat? what keeps
it moving?
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tuxon
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Posted: February 11 2005 at 13:38 |
sinus
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Metropolis
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Posted: February 11 2005 at 13:43 |
cells in the sinoatrial node which depolarize spontaneously (with hormonal and nervous influences on the rate)
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tuxon
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Posted: February 11 2005 at 13:46 |
adenosine 3', 5'-cyclic monophosphate
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Metropolis
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Posted: February 11 2005 at 13:48 |
Well, yes, that is an intracellular messenger who's production is
stimulated by adrenaline and noradrenaline that results in contraction
of cardiac muscle
were all such geeks
Edited by Metropolis
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tuxon
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Posted: February 11 2005 at 13:52 |
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37839-81-9 |
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EINECS NO. |
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FORMULA |
C10H12N5O6P·Na |
MOL WT. |
477.39 |
H.S. CODE |
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TOXICITY |
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SYNONYMS |
cAMP, Sodium; Cyclic adenylic acid, Sodium; |
Adenosine : a purine nucleoside composed of adenine linked by its N9 nitrogen to the C1 carbon of ribose. It is a component of ribonucleic acid and its nucleotides (AMP., ADP, ATP, cAMP) play important roles in biochemical processes such as synthesis of nucleic acids and proteins, photosynthesis, muscle contraction and intracellular signal transduction
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Metropolis
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Posted: February 11 2005 at 13:55 |
indeed, it intracellularly signals for more calcium to move into the
cell, and that causes contraction (or more accurately allows
contraction to occur by binding to troponin on topomyosin and freeing
up the myosin binding sites on the actin molecule)
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We Lost the Skyline............
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Certif1ed
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Posted: February 11 2005 at 14:04 |
tuxon wrote:
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37839-81-9 |
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EINECS NO. |
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FORMULA |
C10H12N5O6P·Na |
MOL WT. |
477.39 |
H.S. CODE |
|
TOXICITY |
|
SYNONYMS |
cAMP, Sodium; Cyclic adenylic acid, Sodium; |
Adenosine : a purine nucleoside composed of adenine linked by its N9 nitrogen to the C1 carbon of ribose. It is a component of ribonucleic acid and its nucleotides (AMP., ADP, ATP, cAMP) play important roles in biochemical processes such as synthesis of nucleic acids and proteins, photosynthesis, muscle contraction and intracellular signal transduction
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Can you get high on that?
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tuxon
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Posted: February 11 2005 at 14:09 |
The heart beats independently of the brain's function. Therefor when you rip a heart out of a living frog it will keep beating for a couple of seconds. Of course it will stop due to lack of energie. The bigger the heart the sooner it will stop beating.
BTW. It is considered cruelty to rip hearts out of living organisms, so don't go out to test this hypothesis.
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I'm always almost unlucky _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Id5ZcnjXSZaSMFMC Id5LM2q2jfqz3YxT
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mirco
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Posted: February 11 2005 at 14:24 |
Oh, progheads are geekers than I suppose...
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Please forgive me for my crappy english!
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DallasBryan
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Posted: February 11 2005 at 16:23 |
very good!!!
and now the breath of life? why do we breathe?
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