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Question 1 of 51
1. Question
The strongest and longest bone in your body is the:
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Question 2 of 51
2. Question
The two bones of your forearm arm are the ulna and radius. The bone of your upper arm is the homerun.
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Question 3 of 51
3. Question
The wide bone of your pelvis that some of your femur muscles attach to is the:
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Question 4 of 51
4. Question
Bone fibers are organized in directions to make the bones stronger.
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Question 5 of 51
5. Question
Trabeculae are built to strengthen your bones to handle stresses better. “Trab” comes from the Latin word which means ‘beam” or “timber”.
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Question 6 of 51
6. Question
The skull has spongy trabecular bone sandwiched between compact bone.
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Question 7 of 51
7. Question
Plane wings have “ribs”. Plane wing “ribs“ might be named after our ribs.
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Question 8 of 51
8. Question
The head of a bird bone (the top of it) may have dense spongy bone in it.
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Question 9 of 51
9. Question
The woodpecker has dense, strong trabeculae in its skull like a hawk has in its wings. But the woodpecker’s are even stronger. These help the bird survive its 1200 head-slams a day.
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Question 10 of 51
10. Question
The picture below is a good example of “trabs in trabs” (trabeculea-type bracing in trabeculea-type bracing). What’s happening below is an example of this.
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Question 11 of 51
11. Question
Cross members in bridges, cranes, gates, roofs of buildings and toilet plungers often have “trabecular design”.
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Question 12 of 51
12. Question
Built in 1889 for the World’s Fair in Paris, the 1063-foot Eiffel tower is a stunning example of using crossmembers and bracing of all kinds to keep a structure standing.
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Question 13 of 51
13. Question
We showed you pictures of bracing in buildings in Tiawan that combined arches and bracing.
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Question 14 of 51
14. Question
Some Roman aqueducts were built with no mortar at all yet are still standing after 2000 years!
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Question 15 of 51
15. Question
Taiwan, Japan, and the Philippines are all islands more than 1000 miles off the coast of China.
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Question 16 of 51
16. Question
House roof trusses use chewing gum to hold them together.
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Question 17 of 51
17. Question
The keel of a bird is in the center of its foot. The flight muscles of the wings grow into it.
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Question 18 of 51
18. Question
Which has the larger keel in relation to its body size?
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Question 19 of 51
19. Question
Steamboats have large keels because it helps them negotiate tight turns.
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Question 20 of 51
20. Question
A flat sternum like we have is easier to attach muscles strongly to than a “cliff-like” keel.
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Question 21 of 51
21. Question
Your pectoral muscles are connected to your sternum.
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Question 22 of 51
22. Question
“Bone Cliffs” provide more surface area for muscle to attach.
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Question 23 of 51
23. Question
The clavicle’s “bone cliff” of our shoulder blade gives the shoulder muscle greater surface area to attach to.
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Question 24 of 51
24. Question
The pectoral muscle attaches to the clavicle in a wide band.
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Question 25 of 51
25. Question
The supracoracoideus pulls the bird foot up with an interesting pulley system.
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Question 26 of 51
26. Question
The pectoralis muscle (pec muscle) attaches to the keel. It pulls the wing down with a powerful stroke.
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Question 27 of 51
27. Question
Flying birds have a sternum that is nearly equal in width and height. Ostriches don’t have a keeled sternum.
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Question 28 of 51
28. Question
Osteoporosis is a malfunction of the brain. It tends to affect more men than women.
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Question 29 of 51
29. Question
Osteoporosis affects the wrist, the hip and the vertebrae a lot.
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Question 30 of 51
30. Question
If it is true that osteoporosis affects the wrist, the hip and the vertebrae mostly, is this because these area are high in the amount of trabecular bone?
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Question 31 of 51
31. Question
Osteoporosis affects trabecular bone greatly. It makes each of these “struts” thinner and more porous.
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Question 32 of 51
32. Question
The image below is showing that osteoporosis can happen in the lumbar vertebrae and the head of the clavicle.
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Question 33 of 51
33. Question
All the ribs connect in the same ways to the sternum (same angle and same spacing).
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Question 34 of 51
34. Question
The sternum (the flat bone in the middle of your chest) only runs partly down the front of your chest because you need room for your intestine to expand.
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Question 35 of 51
35. Question
Piezoelectricity is a type of electricity generated by squeezing an object like a crystal.
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Question 36 of 51
36. Question
It was thought that the osteocytes read the fluid pressures in the canaliculi.
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Question 37 of 51
37. Question
Up to about how many canaliculi caves connect to each buried osteocyte cell?
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Question 38 of 51
38. Question
Peter Curie, the brother of Mary Curie, worked on borax experiments in the early 1600’s. He and his sister experimented with the static electricity generated by squeezing logs filled with sargasso termites.
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Question 39 of 51
39. Question
The twisting motion of a tennis serve causes unique stresses on the tennis player’s serving arm. This causes the osteocytes to signal the osteoblasts and osteoclasts to begin working on bone to make it stronger for the task of serving.
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Question 40 of 51
40. Question
Have bone designs ever been compared with the structure of the Eiffel Tower?
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Question 41 of 51
41. Question
The six-foot mantis shrimp hits so fast that it causes a spark of light because of the cavitation caused.
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Question 42 of 51
42. Question
The mantis punch creates cavitation where a low pressure bubble is formed that crashes inward.
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Question 43 of 51
43. Question
The mantis shrimp’s claw is uniquely designed on the nano-level so it doesn’t destroy itself with its incredible force.
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Question 44 of 51
44. Question
An ant’s exoskeleton is made of re-formed sugar. The sugar-collagen is skillfully woven in the exoskeleton so it is both lightweight and strong! (Read this carefully!!)
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Question 45 of 51
45. Question
The parathyroid glands are watermelon-sized glands located on the back side of the thyroid. These indispensable glands monitor the calcium levels of the blood.
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Question 46 of 51
46. Question
THIS IS VERY DIFFICULT. SEE IF YOU CAN GET IT.
The latest research with maintaining calcium balances in the body is that when the parathyroid glands detect low levels, PTH molecules are released and the imprisoned osteocyte cells all over the body respond to these messages. How? This surprised everyone. They secrete acids and enzymes to begin to eat away the inner surface of the lacuna they are trapped in. They are “growing” the cave they are locked in!
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Question 47 of 51
47. Question
The rice-sized parathyroid glands are on the back side of the thyroid. These are actually located around your windpipe, just below your Adam’s apple.
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Question 48 of 51
48. Question
Richard Owen loved studying bird soups. He named the dinosaurs. He is seen in the picture here with the king-sized 500-pound elephant bird!
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Question 49 of 51
49. Question
Sir Richard Owen named the dinosaurs. He is the first person to identify the parathyroid glands. He found large ones on dead Rhinos
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Question 50 of 51
50. Question
Could you make a 2000-Mile-Across Nightlight or a 860,000-Mile-Across Heater?
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Question 51 of 51
51. Question
List 5 summaries of the devotional parts in this article and give a different personal application to each.
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This response will be awarded full points automatically, but it can be reviewed and adjusted after submission.
Grading can be reviewed and adjusted.Grading can be reviewed and adjusted. -