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Trace around your hand on the paper given and draw what you think the bones inside look like.

Trace around your hand on the paper given and draw what you think the bones inside look like. What would happen if humans didn't have bones?

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Trace around your hand on the paper given and draw what you think the bones inside look like.

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  1. Trace around your hand on the paper given and draw what you think the bones inside look like.

  2. What would happen if humans didn't have bones? You'd be floppy like a beanbag. Could you stand up? Forget it. Could you walk? No way. Without bones you'd be just a puddle of skin and guts on the floor. Bones have 5 purposes. Some, like your backbone, provide the structure that enables you to stand erect instead of lying like a puddle on the floor. Other bones protect the delicate, and sometimes soft, insides of your body. Your skull, a series of fused bones, acts like a hard protective helmet for your brain. The bones, or vertebrae, of your spinal column surround your spinal cord, a complex bundle of nerves. Imagine what could happen to your heart and lungs without the protective armour of your rib cage! Move your cursor over the boy

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  4. How many bones do humans have?When you were born you had over 300 bones. As you grew, some of these bones began to fuse together. The result? An adult has only 206 bones!

  5. How do my bones move? With a lot of help. You need muscles to pull on bones so that you can move. Along with muscles and joints, bones are responsible for you being able to move. Your muscles are attached to bones. When muscles contract, the bones to which they are attached act as levers and cause various body parts to move.

  6. Joints You also need joints that provide flexible connections between these bones. Your body has different kinds of joints. Some, such as those in your knees, work like door hinges, enabling you to move back and forth. Those in your neck enable bones to pivot so you can turn your head. Still other joints like the shoulder enable you to move your arms 360 degrees like a shower-head.

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  8. Are your bones alive? Absolutely. Bones are made of a mix of hard stuff that gives them strength and tons of living cells, which help them grow and repair themselves. Like other cells in your body, the bone cells rely on blood to keep them alive. Blood brings them food and oxygen and takes away waste. If bones weren't made of living cells, things like broken toes or arms would never mend. But don't worry, they do. That's because your bone cells are busy growing and multiplying to repair the break! How? When you break your toe, blood clots form to close up the space between the broken segments. Then your body mobilizes bone cells to deposit more of the hard stuff to bridge the break.

  9. A good way to become familiar with the size and shape of bones within the human body is to draw them. Half a skeleton has been provided for you. Use it to draw the other half of this skeleton.

  10. What is bone marrow? Many bones are hollow. Their hollowness makes bones strong and light. It's in the centre of many bones that bone marrow makes new red and white blood cells. Red blood cells ensure that oxygen is distributed to all parts of your body and white blood cells ensure you are able to fight germs and disease. Who would have thought that bones make blood!?!

  11. How are red blood cells made?

  12. Do all critters have a backbone? No. In fact, some 97% of animals on earth don't have a backbone or spine. Remarkably enough, of those that do have a backbone, there are lots of similarities: a skull surrounding a brain, a rib cage surrounding a heart, and a jawbone or mouth opening. Animals without backbones are called? Invertebrates

  13. Quizzes http://insideout.rigb.org/ri/anatomy/quiz/quiz.html http://www.msjensen.gen.umn.edu/webanatomy/skeletons_skulls/default.htm l http://www.marton.blackpool.sch.uk/HealthWeek/SkeletonQuiz.htm http://school.discovery.com/quizzes29/dbwernicke/skeletonquiz.html http://www.klbschool.org.uk/interactive/science/skeleton.htm http://www.coxhoe.durham.sch.uk/Classrooms/Y4%20Learning%20Resources/Skeleton-quiz.htm http://www.factmonster.com/quizzes/skeleton/1.html http://www.marsdenshs.qld.edu.au/subjects/science/junior_science/quizzes/biology-skeletal.html

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