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Histology

(Slides 11-21)




Emily Siroonian

Table of Contents
Slide Missing- Slide 11
Connective (Tendon)- Slide 12
Connective (Ligament)- Slide 13
Connective (Hyaline Cartilage)- Slide 14A
Connective (Elastic Cartilage)- Slide 14B
Connective (Compact Bone)- Slide 15
Connective (Spongy Bone)- Slide 16
Nervous (Neuron)- Slide 17
Nervous (Spinal Cord)- Slide 18
Nervous (Cerebrum)- Slide 19
Nervous (Cerebellum)- Slide 20
Hemopoietic (Blood)- Slide 21
Connective (Tendon)







Form: Grouped together in parallel bundles.
Function: It helps move bones.
Location: It is found where muscle binds to bone.
Interesting Fact: Tendons are collagenous fibers.

Connective (Ligament)








Form: Grouped together in parallel bundles.
Function: Ligaments bind bone to bone.
Location: It is found in the skeletal system.
Interesting Facts: Ligaments have great tensile strength.

Connective (Hyaline Cartilage)




Form: Hyaline cartilage has thin collagenous fibers and looks
like white glass.
Function: It helps develop most bones.
Location: It is found in the ends of bones in some joints, in the
soft areas of the nose, and the rings of the repertory passage.
Interesting Facts: Hyaline cartilage is the most common type
of cartilage.
Connective (Elastic Cartilage)







Form: It has a dense matrix of elastic fibers.
Function: Elastic Cartilage provides framework or structure for
the ears and certain areas of the larynx.
Location: It is found in the ears and larynx.
Interesting Facts: It has more flexibility than hyaline cartilage.

Connective (Compact Bone)









Form: It has a dense bony matrix with no spaces within the
bone.
Function: Compact bones give support and provide mineral
storage and protection.
Location: It is found in the outer parts of bone.
Interesting Facts: It makes up eighty percent of the human
skeleton.
Connective (Spongy Bone)









Form: Spongy bone consists of a large number of branching
bony plates.
Function: It helps form bone marrow.
Location: It is found on the head of a long bone.
Interesting Fact: The matrix within the spongy bone contains
no blood vessels.

Nervous (Neuron)










Form: Its cells branch out or spread out like tree roots.
Function: The neuron transmits nerve impulses.
Location: It is found in the spinal cord, peripheral nerves, and
the brain.
Interesting Fact: It is the main focus point of the nervous
system.
Nervous (Spinal Cord)










Form: It is composed of long bundled fibers.
Function: The spinal cord transmits nerve impulses and controls
leg and trunk functions.
Location: It is found in the spinal cord (from the brain to the
intervertebral disc).
Interesting Facts: It has thirty-one segments and each give rise
to spinal nerves.
Nervous (Cerebrum)









Form: It is separated into four parts: frontal lobe, parietal lobe,
occipital, and temporal lobe.
Function: The cerebrum provides a higher mental function.
Location: It is found in the brain.
Interesting Fact: It is the largest part of the brain.


Nervous (Cerebellum)









Form: It is separated into different layers.
Function: The cerebellum provides coordinate voluntary
muscular movements.
Location: It is located in the brain.
Interesting Fact: It is made up of mainly white matter with a
layer of gray matter on the surface of it.
Hemopoietic (Blood)






Form: Hemopoietic has red and white blood cells.
Function: It moves substances and helps keep a stable internal
environment.
Location: It is located in blood vessels.
Interesting Fact: It is created in red marrow that is in hollow
chambers of long bones.
Work Cited
"Brain Structures and Their Functions." Brain Structures and Their Functions. N.p., n.d. Web.
20 Oct. 2014. (Cerebrum)
The Editors of Encyclopdia Britannica. "Compact Bone (anatomy)."Encyclopedia Britannica
Online. Encyclopedia Britannica, n.d. Web. 18 Oct. 2014. (Compact Bone)
"Histology Photomicrographs." Spongy Bone. N.p., n.d. Web. 18 Oct. 2014. (Spongy Bone)
Shier, David, Jackie Butler, and Ricki Lewis. Hole's Essentials of Human Anatomy and
Physiology. Boston: McGraw-Hill, 2006. Print. (Slides 12-21)
Picture Cited
"Animalia - Chordata - Mammalia." BIODIDAC. N.p., n.d. Web. 20 Oct. 2014. (Tendon)
"C57BL6J-spinal Cord (cervical) Tissue Slides (Normal) 2 Slides." C57BL6J-spinal Cord
(cervical) Tissue Slides (Normal) (S067W0). N.p., n.d. Web. 20 Oct. 2014. (Spinal Cord)
"CONNECTIVE TISSUES LAB." Connective_Tissues. N.p., n.d. Web. 20 Oct. 2014.
(Ligament)
"Histology." Cerebrum (cerebral Cortex) Slide #96. N.p., n.d. Web. 20 Oct. 2014. (Cerebrum)
"Histology Examples." Mrs. Jackson - Physics 1 and Anatomy & Physiology. N.p., n.d. Web. 20
Oct. 2014. (Hemopoietic)
"Histology Photo Album." Bone Histology. N.p., n.d. Web. 20 Oct. 2014. (Spongy Bone)
"Histology Review." Histology Review. N.p., n.d. Web. 20 Oct. 2014. (Compact Bone)
"Histology@Yale." Elastic Cartilage. N.p., n.d. Web. 17 Oct. 2014. (Elastic Cartilage)
"Histology@Yale." Hyaline Cartilage. N.p., n.d. Web. 19 Oct. 2014. (Hyaline Cartilage)
"Life Sciences Biology MOTOR NEURON." Life Sciences Biology MOTOR NEURON. N.p.,
n.d. Web. 20 Oct. 2014. (Neuron)
"Nervous Tissue." Exercise 9:. N.p., n.d. Web. 19 Oct. 2014. (Cerebellum)

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