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21. Where is the temporal bone located?
22. What is the longest, heaviest, and strongest bone in the body?  
23. What parts make up the appendicular skeleton?
24. Which organs are protected by the pelvic girdle?
25. How many tarsal bones are in the ankle?  
26. How many bones are in the lower leg?
27. Which lower leg bone is closest to the midline of the body?  
28. Which bones are located in the foot?  
29. What are the two girdles found in the appendicular skeleton?  
30. What is the common name for the scapula?  
31. The hipbones are composed of which three fused bones?  
32. Which of the hipbones is the most superior in orientation?  
33. How many arches does the foot have?  
34. What is the name for the group of bones that make up the wrist?
Joints
35. What is an open fracture?
36. What is a greenstick fracture?
37. What are the symptoms of osteoporosis?
38. What are the 2 functions of joints?
39. What are the 2 different ways joints are classified?                                                             What are the 3 sub-classifications of each?
40. What are the types of synovial joints?
41. What are the 6 different kinds of movement that joints can allow?

User Cobey
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2 Answers

5 votes

Hi i'm glad to help but just to let you know it only gave us 25 points not 50 points so i'm only asking if you wont mind to mark me with the crown please.

Help for 50pts 21. Where is the temporal bone located? 22. What is the longest, heaviest-example-1
Help for 50pts 21. Where is the temporal bone located? 22. What is the longest, heaviest-example-2
User Mohit Manhas
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8.1k points
2 votes

Answer:all your explanation for all answers! :)

Explanation:The appendicular skeleton is one of two major bone groups in the body, the other being the axial skeleton. The appendicular skeleton is comprised of the upper and lower extremities, which include the shoulder girdle and pelvis. The shoulder girdle and pelvis provide connection points between the appendicular skeleton and the axial skeleton to where mechanical loads transfer. Of the 206 bones in the adult human body, a total of 126 bones form the appendicular skeleton. The bones that contribute to the appendicular skeleton include the bones of the hands, feet, upper extremity, lower extremity, shoulder girdle, and pelvic bones.[1]

A single upper extremity includes 14 phalanges (proximal, intermediate, and distal), five metacarpals, eight carpal bones, two forearm bones (radius and ulna), the humerus, and the shoulder girdle (scapula and clavicle).[2] A single lower extremity contains 14 phalanges (proximal, intermediate, and distal), five metatarsals, seven tarsal bones, two leg bones (fibula, tibia), the femur, and the hip bone or coxal bone (ilium, ischium, and pubis).[3][4] These bones articulate with each other and are joined by a multitude of ligaments, cartilage, and tendons to form the appendicular skeleton. There are also bony prominences and protuberances that serve as muscle attachment sites on the surfaces of these bones. The appendicular skeleton is structured for a greater range of motion and locomotion generation when compared to the axial skeleton.

User Aleksey Bakin
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7.4k points