192k views
4 votes
If this were a traditional "face to face" A&P lab and you were examining real human bones from your "box of bones," you'd notice that the xiphoid process is not attached to the sternum and is floating around the bottom of the box, or it's lost completely. Why do you think this may be such a common occurrence? HINT: Think about how it is attached - what holds it in place when we're alive?

User Gurdeep
by
7.2k points

1 Answer

2 votes

Answer:

gravity

Step-by-step explanation:

because is says it has zero gravity

User Jesselle
by
7.3k points