Human Body Systems Quiz
What are the 3 main parts of the brain, and what do they do?
Bones make red blood cells.
Cells, tissue, organs, organ systems.
The 3 main parts are the heart, blood, and blood vessels. It carries needed substances to cells. It carries waste products away from the cells. The blood contains cells that fight disease.
Your skin is the largest organ of your body. Your skin covers and protects your body from injuries, infections, and water loss. Your skin helps regulate body temperature. Your skin helps gather information about the environment. Your skin produces Vitamin D. Your skin helps to eliminate waste. Your skin has two layers, the thinner outer epidermis, and the thicker inner layer, the dermis.
To break down food into molecules your body can use. Also, to absorb the molecules into the blood and carry them throughout the body. To eliminate waste from the body.
To move oxygen from the outside of the environment into your body. Also, to remove carbon dioxide and water from the body.
206 bones.
There are 600 muscles in your body. Involuntary muscles are not under your conscious control. Voluntary muscles are under your conscious control. Muscle work in pairs, because they can only contract, not extend.
It produces chemicals that control many of the body’s daily activities. It also regulates long-term changes such as growth and development.
Homeostasis is the process by which an organism’s internal environment is kept stable in spite of changes in the external environment.
Steel.
Provides shape and support, enables your body to move, protects your organs, produces blood cells, stores minerals until you body needs them.
A group of organs that work together to perform a major function.
The brain is part of this system. It is like a computer that controls the body’s functions, and the nervous system is the network that relays the messages to the parts of the body (by way of the spinal cord). Receives information about what is happening both inside and outside your body. Directs the way in which your body responds to the information. Helps maintain homeostasis.
3 types of blood vessels: arteries, capillaries, veins. Arteries carry blood away from the heart and enter tiny, narrow vessels called capillaries. From there the blood flows into veins which carry the blood back to the heart. The right side of the heart pumps blood to the lungs. The left side of the heart pumps blood to the rest of the body. The path blood flows through the body in two loops. In the first loop it travels from the heart to the lungs and then back to the heart. In the second loop the blood travels from the heart throughout the body and then back to the heart. There are 2 types of blood cells: red and white. Red blood cells take up oxygen in the lungs and deliver it to cells everywhere in the body. White blood cells are the body’s disease fighters.
The most common blood type is O+
The Cerebrum, Cerebellum, and the Brainstem. The Cerebrum tells everybody what to do, the Cerebellum carries out/organizes what needs to be done, and the Brainstem sends out the message.
Collects wastes produced by the cells and removes the wastes from the body.
The skeletal system, muscular system, respiratory system, nervous system, cardiovascular system, excretory system, and endocrine system.
List the systems of the body.
Bones make red blood cells.
Cells, tissue, organs, organ systems.
The 3 main parts are the heart, blood, and blood vessels. It carries needed substances to cells. It carries waste products away from the cells. The blood contains cells that fight disease.
Your skin is the largest organ of your body. Your skin covers and protects your body from injuries, infections, and water loss. Your skin helps regulate body temperature. Your skin helps gather information about the environment. Your skin produces Vitamin D. Your skin helps to eliminate waste. Your skin has two layers, the thinner outer epidermis, and the thicker inner layer, the dermis.
To break down food into molecules your body can use. Also, to absorb the molecules into the blood and carry them throughout the body. To eliminate waste from the body.
To move oxygen from the outside of the environment into your body. Also, to remove carbon dioxide and water from the body.
206 bones.
There are 600 muscles in your body. Involuntary muscles are not under your conscious control. Voluntary muscles are under your conscious control. Muscle work in pairs, because they can only contract, not extend.
It produces chemicals that control many of the body’s daily activities. It also regulates long-term changes such as growth and development.
Homeostasis is the process by which an organism’s internal environment is kept stable in spite of changes in the external environment.
Steel.
Provides shape and support, enables your body to move, protects your organs, produces blood cells, stores minerals until you body needs them.
A group of organs that work together to perform a major function.
The brain is part of this system. It is like a computer that controls the body’s functions, and the nervous system is the network that relays the messages to the parts of the body (by way of the spinal cord). Receives information about what is happening both inside and outside your body. Directs the way in which your body responds to the information. Helps maintain homeostasis.
3 types of blood vessels: arteries, capillaries, veins. Arteries carry blood away from the heart and enter tiny, narrow vessels called capillaries. From there the blood flows into veins which carry the blood back to the heart. The right side of the heart pumps blood to the lungs. The left side of the heart pumps blood to the rest of the body. The path blood flows through the body in two loops. In the first loop it travels from the heart to the lungs and then back to the heart. In the second loop the blood travels from the heart throughout the body and then back to the heart. There are 2 types of blood cells: red and white. Red blood cells take up oxygen in the lungs and deliver it to cells everywhere in the body. White blood cells are the body’s disease fighters.
The most common blood type is O+
The Cerebrum, Cerebellum, and the Brainstem. The Cerebrum tells everybody what to do, the Cerebellum carries out/organizes what needs to be done, and the Brainstem sends out the message.
Collects wastes produced by the cells and removes the wastes from the body.
The skeletal system, muscular system, respiratory system, nervous system, cardiovascular system, excretory system, and endocrine system.
What is homeostasis?
Bones make red blood cells.
Cells, tissue, organs, organ systems.
The 3 main parts are the heart, blood, and blood vessels. It carries needed substances to cells. It carries waste products away from the cells. The blood contains cells that fight disease.
Your skin is the largest organ of your body. Your skin covers and protects your body from injuries, infections, and water loss. Your skin helps regulate body temperature. Your skin helps gather information about the environment. Your skin produces Vitamin D. Your skin helps to eliminate waste. Your skin has two layers, the thinner outer epidermis, and the thicker inner layer, the dermis.
To break down food into molecules your body can use. Also, to absorb the molecules into the blood and carry them throughout the body. To eliminate waste from the body.
To move oxygen from the outside of the environment into your body. Also, to remove carbon dioxide and water from the body.
206 bones.
There are 600 muscles in your body. Involuntary muscles are not under your conscious control. Voluntary muscles are under your conscious control. Muscle work in pairs, because they can only contract, not extend.
It produces chemicals that control many of the body’s daily activities. It also regulates long-term changes such as growth and development.
Homeostasis is the process by which an organism’s internal environment is kept stable in spite of changes in the external environment.
Steel.
Provides shape and support, enables your body to move, protects your organs, produces blood cells, stores minerals until you body needs them.
A group of organs that work together to perform a major function.
The brain is part of this system. It is like a computer that controls the body’s functions, and the nervous system is the network that relays the messages to the parts of the body (by way of the spinal cord). Receives information about what is happening both inside and outside your body. Directs the way in which your body responds to the information. Helps maintain homeostasis.
3 types of blood vessels: arteries, capillaries, veins. Arteries carry blood away from the heart and enter tiny, narrow vessels called capillaries. From there the blood flows into veins which carry the blood back to the heart. The right side of the heart pumps blood to the lungs. The left side of the heart pumps blood to the rest of the body. The path blood flows through the body in two loops. In the first loop it travels from the heart to the lungs and then back to the heart. In the second loop the blood travels from the heart throughout the body and then back to the heart. There are 2 types of blood cells: red and white. Red blood cells take up oxygen in the lungs and deliver it to cells everywhere in the body. White blood cells are the body’s disease fighters.
The most common blood type is O+
The Cerebrum, Cerebellum, and the Brainstem. The Cerebrum tells everybody what to do, the Cerebellum carries out/organizes what needs to be done, and the Brainstem sends out the message.
Collects wastes produced by the cells and removes the wastes from the body.
The skeletal system, muscular system, respiratory system, nervous system, cardiovascular system, excretory system, and endocrine system.
What are the levels of organization of the human body from smallest to largest?
Bones make red blood cells.
Cells, tissue, organs, organ systems.
The 3 main parts are the heart, blood, and blood vessels. It carries needed substances to cells. It carries waste products away from the cells. The blood contains cells that fight disease.
Your skin is the largest organ of your body. Your skin covers and protects your body from injuries, infections, and water loss. Your skin helps regulate body temperature. Your skin helps gather information about the environment. Your skin produces Vitamin D. Your skin helps to eliminate waste. Your skin has two layers, the thinner outer epidermis, and the thicker inner layer, the dermis.
To break down food into molecules your body can use. Also, to absorb the molecules into the blood and carry them throughout the body. To eliminate waste from the body.
To move oxygen from the outside of the environment into your body. Also, to remove carbon dioxide and water from the body.
206 bones.
There are 600 muscles in your body. Involuntary muscles are not under your conscious control. Voluntary muscles are under your conscious control. Muscle work in pairs, because they can only contract, not extend.
It produces chemicals that control many of the body’s daily activities. It also regulates long-term changes such as growth and development.
Homeostasis is the process by which an organism’s internal environment is kept stable in spite of changes in the external environment.
Steel.
Provides shape and support, enables your body to move, protects your organs, produces blood cells, stores minerals until you body needs them.
A group of organs that work together to perform a major function.
The brain is part of this system. It is like a computer that controls the body’s functions, and the nervous system is the network that relays the messages to the parts of the body (by way of the spinal cord). Receives information about what is happening both inside and outside your body. Directs the way in which your body responds to the information. Helps maintain homeostasis.
3 types of blood vessels: arteries, capillaries, veins. Arteries carry blood away from the heart and enter tiny, narrow vessels called capillaries. From there the blood flows into veins which carry the blood back to the heart. The right side of the heart pumps blood to the lungs. The left side of the heart pumps blood to the rest of the body. The path blood flows through the body in two loops. In the first loop it travels from the heart to the lungs and then back to the heart. In the second loop the blood travels from the heart throughout the body and then back to the heart. There are 2 types of blood cells: red and white. Red blood cells take up oxygen in the lungs and deliver it to cells everywhere in the body. White blood cells are the body’s disease fighters.
The most common blood type is O+
The Cerebrum, Cerebellum, and the Brainstem. The Cerebrum tells everybody what to do, the Cerebellum carries out/organizes what needs to be done, and the Brainstem sends out the message.
Collects wastes produced by the cells and removes the wastes from the body.
The skeletal system, muscular system, respiratory system, nervous system, cardiovascular system, excretory system, and endocrine system.
What are the functions of the endocrine system?
Bones make red blood cells.
Cells, tissue, organs, organ systems.
The 3 main parts are the heart, blood, and blood vessels. It carries needed substances to cells. It carries waste products away from the cells. The blood contains cells that fight disease.
Your skin is the largest organ of your body. Your skin covers and protects your body from injuries, infections, and water loss. Your skin helps regulate body temperature. Your skin helps gather information about the environment. Your skin produces Vitamin D. Your skin helps to eliminate waste. Your skin has two layers, the thinner outer epidermis, and the thicker inner layer, the dermis.
To break down food into molecules your body can use. Also, to absorb the molecules into the blood and carry them throughout the body. To eliminate waste from the body.
To move oxygen from the outside of the environment into your body. Also, to remove carbon dioxide and water from the body.
206 bones.
There are 600 muscles in your body. Involuntary muscles are not under your conscious control. Voluntary muscles are under your conscious control. Muscle work in pairs, because they can only contract, not extend.
It produces chemicals that control many of the body’s daily activities. It also regulates long-term changes such as growth and development.
Homeostasis is the process by which an organism’s internal environment is kept stable in spite of changes in the external environment.
Steel.
Provides shape and support, enables your body to move, protects your organs, produces blood cells, stores minerals until you body needs them.
A group of organs that work together to perform a major function.
The brain is part of this system. It is like a computer that controls the body’s functions, and the nervous system is the network that relays the messages to the parts of the body (by way of the spinal cord). Receives information about what is happening both inside and outside your body. Directs the way in which your body responds to the information. Helps maintain homeostasis.
3 types of blood vessels: arteries, capillaries, veins. Arteries carry blood away from the heart and enter tiny, narrow vessels called capillaries. From there the blood flows into veins which carry the blood back to the heart. The right side of the heart pumps blood to the lungs. The left side of the heart pumps blood to the rest of the body. The path blood flows through the body in two loops. In the first loop it travels from the heart to the lungs and then back to the heart. In the second loop the blood travels from the heart throughout the body and then back to the heart. There are 2 types of blood cells: red and white. Red blood cells take up oxygen in the lungs and deliver it to cells everywhere in the body. White blood cells are the body’s disease fighters.
The most common blood type is O+
The Cerebrum, Cerebellum, and the Brainstem. The Cerebrum tells everybody what to do, the Cerebellum carries out/organizes what needs to be done, and the Brainstem sends out the message.
Collects wastes produced by the cells and removes the wastes from the body.
The skeletal system, muscular system, respiratory system, nervous system, cardiovascular system, excretory system, and endocrine system.
What are some facts about skin?
Bones make red blood cells.
Cells, tissue, organs, organ systems.
The 3 main parts are the heart, blood, and blood vessels. It carries needed substances to cells. It carries waste products away from the cells. The blood contains cells that fight disease.
Your skin is the largest organ of your body. Your skin covers and protects your body from injuries, infections, and water loss. Your skin helps regulate body temperature. Your skin helps gather information about the environment. Your skin produces Vitamin D. Your skin helps to eliminate waste. Your skin has two layers, the thinner outer epidermis, and the thicker inner layer, the dermis.
To break down food into molecules your body can use. Also, to absorb the molecules into the blood and carry them throughout the body. To eliminate waste from the body.
To move oxygen from the outside of the environment into your body. Also, to remove carbon dioxide and water from the body.
206 bones.
There are 600 muscles in your body. Involuntary muscles are not under your conscious control. Voluntary muscles are under your conscious control. Muscle work in pairs, because they can only contract, not extend.
It produces chemicals that control many of the body’s daily activities. It also regulates long-term changes such as growth and development.
Homeostasis is the process by which an organism’s internal environment is kept stable in spite of changes in the external environment.
Steel.
Provides shape and support, enables your body to move, protects your organs, produces blood cells, stores minerals until you body needs them.
A group of organs that work together to perform a major function.
The brain is part of this system. It is like a computer that controls the body’s functions, and the nervous system is the network that relays the messages to the parts of the body (by way of the spinal cord). Receives information about what is happening both inside and outside your body. Directs the way in which your body responds to the information. Helps maintain homeostasis.
3 types of blood vessels: arteries, capillaries, veins. Arteries carry blood away from the heart and enter tiny, narrow vessels called capillaries. From there the blood flows into veins which carry the blood back to the heart. The right side of the heart pumps blood to the lungs. The left side of the heart pumps blood to the rest of the body. The path blood flows through the body in two loops. In the first loop it travels from the heart to the lungs and then back to the heart. In the second loop the blood travels from the heart throughout the body and then back to the heart. There are 2 types of blood cells: red and white. Red blood cells take up oxygen in the lungs and deliver it to cells everywhere in the body. White blood cells are the body’s disease fighters.
The most common blood type is O+
The Cerebrum, Cerebellum, and the Brainstem. The Cerebrum tells everybody what to do, the Cerebellum carries out/organizes what needs to be done, and the Brainstem sends out the message.
Collects wastes produced by the cells and removes the wastes from the body.
The skeletal system, muscular system, respiratory system, nervous system, cardiovascular system, excretory system, and endocrine system.
What are the five functions of the skeletal system?
Bones make red blood cells.
Cells, tissue, organs, organ systems.
The 3 main parts are the heart, blood, and blood vessels. It carries needed substances to cells. It carries waste products away from the cells. The blood contains cells that fight disease.
Your skin is the largest organ of your body. Your skin covers and protects your body from injuries, infections, and water loss. Your skin helps regulate body temperature. Your skin helps gather information about the environment. Your skin produces Vitamin D. Your skin helps to eliminate waste. Your skin has two layers, the thinner outer epidermis, and the thicker inner layer, the dermis.
To break down food into molecules your body can use. Also, to absorb the molecules into the blood and carry them throughout the body. To eliminate waste from the body.
To move oxygen from the outside of the environment into your body. Also, to remove carbon dioxide and water from the body.
206 bones.
There are 600 muscles in your body. Involuntary muscles are not under your conscious control. Voluntary muscles are under your conscious control. Muscle work in pairs, because they can only contract, not extend.
It produces chemicals that control many of the body’s daily activities. It also regulates long-term changes such as growth and development.
Homeostasis is the process by which an organism’s internal environment is kept stable in spite of changes in the external environment.
Steel.
Provides shape and support, enables your body to move, protects your organs, produces blood cells, stores minerals until you body needs them.
A group of organs that work together to perform a major function.
The brain is part of this system. It is like a computer that controls the body’s functions, and the nervous system is the network that relays the messages to the parts of the body (by way of the spinal cord). Receives information about what is happening both inside and outside your body. Directs the way in which your body responds to the information. Helps maintain homeostasis.
3 types of blood vessels: arteries, capillaries, veins. Arteries carry blood away from the heart and enter tiny, narrow vessels called capillaries. From there the blood flows into veins which carry the blood back to the heart. The right side of the heart pumps blood to the lungs. The left side of the heart pumps blood to the rest of the body. The path blood flows through the body in two loops. In the first loop it travels from the heart to the lungs and then back to the heart. In the second loop the blood travels from the heart throughout the body and then back to the heart. There are 2 types of blood cells: red and white. Red blood cells take up oxygen in the lungs and deliver it to cells everywhere in the body. White blood cells are the body’s disease fighters.
The most common blood type is O+
The Cerebrum, Cerebellum, and the Brainstem. The Cerebrum tells everybody what to do, the Cerebellum carries out/organizes what needs to be done, and the Brainstem sends out the message.
Collects wastes produced by the cells and removes the wastes from the body.
The skeletal system, muscular system, respiratory system, nervous system, cardiovascular system, excretory system, and endocrine system.
How many bones do we have in our body?
Bones make red blood cells.
Cells, tissue, organs, organ systems.
The 3 main parts are the heart, blood, and blood vessels. It carries needed substances to cells. It carries waste products away from the cells. The blood contains cells that fight disease.
Your skin is the largest organ of your body. Your skin covers and protects your body from injuries, infections, and water loss. Your skin helps regulate body temperature. Your skin helps gather information about the environment. Your skin produces Vitamin D. Your skin helps to eliminate waste. Your skin has two layers, the thinner outer epidermis, and the thicker inner layer, the dermis.
To break down food into molecules your body can use. Also, to absorb the molecules into the blood and carry them throughout the body. To eliminate waste from the body.
To move oxygen from the outside of the environment into your body. Also, to remove carbon dioxide and water from the body.
206 bones.
There are 600 muscles in your body. Involuntary muscles are not under your conscious control. Voluntary muscles are under your conscious control. Muscle work in pairs, because they can only contract, not extend.
It produces chemicals that control many of the body’s daily activities. It also regulates long-term changes such as growth and development.
Homeostasis is the process by which an organism’s internal environment is kept stable in spite of changes in the external environment.
Steel.
Provides shape and support, enables your body to move, protects your organs, produces blood cells, stores minerals until you body needs them.
A group of organs that work together to perform a major function.
The brain is part of this system. It is like a computer that controls the body’s functions, and the nervous system is the network that relays the messages to the parts of the body (by way of the spinal cord). Receives information about what is happening both inside and outside your body. Directs the way in which your body responds to the information. Helps maintain homeostasis.
3 types of blood vessels: arteries, capillaries, veins. Arteries carry blood away from the heart and enter tiny, narrow vessels called capillaries. From there the blood flows into veins which carry the blood back to the heart. The right side of the heart pumps blood to the lungs. The left side of the heart pumps blood to the rest of the body. The path blood flows through the body in two loops. In the first loop it travels from the heart to the lungs and then back to the heart. In the second loop the blood travels from the heart throughout the body and then back to the heart. There are 2 types of blood cells: red and white. Red blood cells take up oxygen in the lungs and deliver it to cells everywhere in the body. White blood cells are the body’s disease fighters.
The most common blood type is O+
The Cerebrum, Cerebellum, and the Brainstem. The Cerebrum tells everybody what to do, the Cerebellum carries out/organizes what needs to be done, and the Brainstem sends out the message.
Collects wastes produced by the cells and removes the wastes from the body.
The skeletal system, muscular system, respiratory system, nervous system, cardiovascular system, excretory system, and endocrine system.
What is the most common blood type?
Bones make red blood cells.
Cells, tissue, organs, organ systems.
The 3 main parts are the heart, blood, and blood vessels. It carries needed substances to cells. It carries waste products away from the cells. The blood contains cells that fight disease.
Your skin is the largest organ of your body. Your skin covers and protects your body from injuries, infections, and water loss. Your skin helps regulate body temperature. Your skin helps gather information about the environment. Your skin produces Vitamin D. Your skin helps to eliminate waste. Your skin has two layers, the thinner outer epidermis, and the thicker inner layer, the dermis.
To break down food into molecules your body can use. Also, to absorb the molecules into the blood and carry them throughout the body. To eliminate waste from the body.
To move oxygen from the outside of the environment into your body. Also, to remove carbon dioxide and water from the body.
206 bones.
There are 600 muscles in your body. Involuntary muscles are not under your conscious control. Voluntary muscles are under your conscious control. Muscle work in pairs, because they can only contract, not extend.
It produces chemicals that control many of the body’s daily activities. It also regulates long-term changes such as growth and development.
Homeostasis is the process by which an organism’s internal environment is kept stable in spite of changes in the external environment.
Steel.
Provides shape and support, enables your body to move, protects your organs, produces blood cells, stores minerals until you body needs them.
A group of organs that work together to perform a major function.
The brain is part of this system. It is like a computer that controls the body’s functions, and the nervous system is the network that relays the messages to the parts of the body (by way of the spinal cord). Receives information about what is happening both inside and outside your body. Directs the way in which your body responds to the information. Helps maintain homeostasis.
3 types of blood vessels: arteries, capillaries, veins. Arteries carry blood away from the heart and enter tiny, narrow vessels called capillaries. From there the blood flows into veins which carry the blood back to the heart. The right side of the heart pumps blood to the lungs. The left side of the heart pumps blood to the rest of the body. The path blood flows through the body in two loops. In the first loop it travels from the heart to the lungs and then back to the heart. In the second loop the blood travels from the heart throughout the body and then back to the heart. There are 2 types of blood cells: red and white. Red blood cells take up oxygen in the lungs and deliver it to cells everywhere in the body. White blood cells are the body’s disease fighters.
The most common blood type is O+
The Cerebrum, Cerebellum, and the Brainstem. The Cerebrum tells everybody what to do, the Cerebellum carries out/organizes what needs to be done, and the Brainstem sends out the message.
Collects wastes produced by the cells and removes the wastes from the body.
The skeletal system, muscular system, respiratory system, nervous system, cardiovascular system, excretory system, and endocrine system.
What is an organ system?
Bones make red blood cells.
Cells, tissue, organs, organ systems.
The 3 main parts are the heart, blood, and blood vessels. It carries needed substances to cells. It carries waste products away from the cells. The blood contains cells that fight disease.
Your skin is the largest organ of your body. Your skin covers and protects your body from injuries, infections, and water loss. Your skin helps regulate body temperature. Your skin helps gather information about the environment. Your skin produces Vitamin D. Your skin helps to eliminate waste. Your skin has two layers, the thinner outer epidermis, and the thicker inner layer, the dermis.
To break down food into molecules your body can use. Also, to absorb the molecules into the blood and carry them throughout the body. To eliminate waste from the body.
To move oxygen from the outside of the environment into your body. Also, to remove carbon dioxide and water from the body.
206 bones.
There are 600 muscles in your body. Involuntary muscles are not under your conscious control. Voluntary muscles are under your conscious control. Muscle work in pairs, because they can only contract, not extend.
It produces chemicals that control many of the body’s daily activities. It also regulates long-term changes such as growth and development.
Homeostasis is the process by which an organism’s internal environment is kept stable in spite of changes in the external environment.
Steel.
Provides shape and support, enables your body to move, protects your organs, produces blood cells, stores minerals until you body needs them.
A group of organs that work together to perform a major function.
The brain is part of this system. It is like a computer that controls the body’s functions, and the nervous system is the network that relays the messages to the parts of the body (by way of the spinal cord). Receives information about what is happening both inside and outside your body. Directs the way in which your body responds to the information. Helps maintain homeostasis.
3 types of blood vessels: arteries, capillaries, veins. Arteries carry blood away from the heart and enter tiny, narrow vessels called capillaries. From there the blood flows into veins which carry the blood back to the heart. The right side of the heart pumps blood to the lungs. The left side of the heart pumps blood to the rest of the body. The path blood flows through the body in two loops. In the first loop it travels from the heart to the lungs and then back to the heart. In the second loop the blood travels from the heart throughout the body and then back to the heart. There are 2 types of blood cells: red and white. Red blood cells take up oxygen in the lungs and deliver it to cells everywhere in the body. White blood cells are the body’s disease fighters.
The most common blood type is O+
The Cerebrum, Cerebellum, and the Brainstem. The Cerebrum tells everybody what to do, the Cerebellum carries out/organizes what needs to be done, and the Brainstem sends out the message.
Collects wastes produced by the cells and removes the wastes from the body.
The skeletal system, muscular system, respiratory system, nervous system, cardiovascular system, excretory system, and endocrine system.
What are some facts about the muscular system?
Bones make red blood cells.
Cells, tissue, organs, organ systems.
The 3 main parts are the heart, blood, and blood vessels. It carries needed substances to cells. It carries waste products away from the cells. The blood contains cells that fight disease.
Your skin is the largest organ of your body. Your skin covers and protects your body from injuries, infections, and water loss. Your skin helps regulate body temperature. Your skin helps gather information about the environment. Your skin produces Vitamin D. Your skin helps to eliminate waste. Your skin has two layers, the thinner outer epidermis, and the thicker inner layer, the dermis.
To break down food into molecules your body can use. Also, to absorb the molecules into the blood and carry them throughout the body. To eliminate waste from the body.
To move oxygen from the outside of the environment into your body. Also, to remove carbon dioxide and water from the body.
206 bones.
There are 600 muscles in your body. Involuntary muscles are not under your conscious control. Voluntary muscles are under your conscious control. Muscle work in pairs, because they can only contract, not extend.
It produces chemicals that control many of the body’s daily activities. It also regulates long-term changes such as growth and development.
Homeostasis is the process by which an organism’s internal environment is kept stable in spite of changes in the external environment.
Steel.
Provides shape and support, enables your body to move, protects your organs, produces blood cells, stores minerals until you body needs them.
A group of organs that work together to perform a major function.
The brain is part of this system. It is like a computer that controls the body’s functions, and the nervous system is the network that relays the messages to the parts of the body (by way of the spinal cord). Receives information about what is happening both inside and outside your body. Directs the way in which your body responds to the information. Helps maintain homeostasis.
3 types of blood vessels: arteries, capillaries, veins. Arteries carry blood away from the heart and enter tiny, narrow vessels called capillaries. From there the blood flows into veins which carry the blood back to the heart. The right side of the heart pumps blood to the lungs. The left side of the heart pumps blood to the rest of the body. The path blood flows through the body in two loops. In the first loop it travels from the heart to the lungs and then back to the heart. In the second loop the blood travels from the heart throughout the body and then back to the heart. There are 2 types of blood cells: red and white. Red blood cells take up oxygen in the lungs and deliver it to cells everywhere in the body. White blood cells are the body’s disease fighters.
The most common blood type is O+
The Cerebrum, Cerebellum, and the Brainstem. The Cerebrum tells everybody what to do, the Cerebellum carries out/organizes what needs to be done, and the Brainstem sends out the message.
Collects wastes produced by the cells and removes the wastes from the body.
The skeletal system, muscular system, respiratory system, nervous system, cardiovascular system, excretory system, and endocrine system.
What is a function of the excretory system?
Bones make red blood cells.
Cells, tissue, organs, organ systems.
The 3 main parts are the heart, blood, and blood vessels. It carries needed substances to cells. It carries waste products away from the cells. The blood contains cells that fight disease.
Your skin is the largest organ of your body. Your skin covers and protects your body from injuries, infections, and water loss. Your skin helps regulate body temperature. Your skin helps gather information about the environment. Your skin produces Vitamin D. Your skin helps to eliminate waste. Your skin has two layers, the thinner outer epidermis, and the thicker inner layer, the dermis.
To break down food into molecules your body can use. Also, to absorb the molecules into the blood and carry them throughout the body. To eliminate waste from the body.
To move oxygen from the outside of the environment into your body. Also, to remove carbon dioxide and water from the body.
206 bones.
There are 600 muscles in your body. Involuntary muscles are not under your conscious control. Voluntary muscles are under your conscious control. Muscle work in pairs, because they can only contract, not extend.
It produces chemicals that control many of the body’s daily activities. It also regulates long-term changes such as growth and development.
Homeostasis is the process by which an organism’s internal environment is kept stable in spite of changes in the external environment.
Steel.
Provides shape and support, enables your body to move, protects your organs, produces blood cells, stores minerals until you body needs them.
A group of organs that work together to perform a major function.
The brain is part of this system. It is like a computer that controls the body’s functions, and the nervous system is the network that relays the messages to the parts of the body (by way of the spinal cord). Receives information about what is happening both inside and outside your body. Directs the way in which your body responds to the information. Helps maintain homeostasis.
3 types of blood vessels: arteries, capillaries, veins. Arteries carry blood away from the heart and enter tiny, narrow vessels called capillaries. From there the blood flows into veins which carry the blood back to the heart. The right side of the heart pumps blood to the lungs. The left side of the heart pumps blood to the rest of the body. The path blood flows through the body in two loops. In the first loop it travels from the heart to the lungs and then back to the heart. In the second loop the blood travels from the heart throughout the body and then back to the heart. There are 2 types of blood cells: red and white. Red blood cells take up oxygen in the lungs and deliver it to cells everywhere in the body. White blood cells are the body’s disease fighters.
The most common blood type is O+
The Cerebrum, Cerebellum, and the Brainstem. The Cerebrum tells everybody what to do, the Cerebellum carries out/organizes what needs to be done, and the Brainstem sends out the message.
Collects wastes produced by the cells and removes the wastes from the body.
The skeletal system, muscular system, respiratory system, nervous system, cardiovascular system, excretory system, and endocrine system.
What are your bones stronger than?
Bones make red blood cells.
Cells, tissue, organs, organ systems.
The 3 main parts are the heart, blood, and blood vessels. It carries needed substances to cells. It carries waste products away from the cells. The blood contains cells that fight disease.
Your skin is the largest organ of your body. Your skin covers and protects your body from injuries, infections, and water loss. Your skin helps regulate body temperature. Your skin helps gather information about the environment. Your skin produces Vitamin D. Your skin helps to eliminate waste. Your skin has two layers, the thinner outer epidermis, and the thicker inner layer, the dermis.
To break down food into molecules your body can use. Also, to absorb the molecules into the blood and carry them throughout the body. To eliminate waste from the body.
To move oxygen from the outside of the environment into your body. Also, to remove carbon dioxide and water from the body.
206 bones.
There are 600 muscles in your body. Involuntary muscles are not under your conscious control. Voluntary muscles are under your conscious control. Muscle work in pairs, because they can only contract, not extend.
It produces chemicals that control many of the body’s daily activities. It also regulates long-term changes such as growth and development.
Homeostasis is the process by which an organism’s internal environment is kept stable in spite of changes in the external environment.
Steel.
Provides shape and support, enables your body to move, protects your organs, produces blood cells, stores minerals until you body needs them.
A group of organs that work together to perform a major function.
The brain is part of this system. It is like a computer that controls the body’s functions, and the nervous system is the network that relays the messages to the parts of the body (by way of the spinal cord). Receives information about what is happening both inside and outside your body. Directs the way in which your body responds to the information. Helps maintain homeostasis.
3 types of blood vessels: arteries, capillaries, veins. Arteries carry blood away from the heart and enter tiny, narrow vessels called capillaries. From there the blood flows into veins which carry the blood back to the heart. The right side of the heart pumps blood to the lungs. The left side of the heart pumps blood to the rest of the body. The path blood flows through the body in two loops. In the first loop it travels from the heart to the lungs and then back to the heart. In the second loop the blood travels from the heart throughout the body and then back to the heart. There are 2 types of blood cells: red and white. Red blood cells take up oxygen in the lungs and deliver it to cells everywhere in the body. White blood cells are the body’s disease fighters.
The most common blood type is O+
The Cerebrum, Cerebellum, and the Brainstem. The Cerebrum tells everybody what to do, the Cerebellum carries out/organizes what needs to be done, and the Brainstem sends out the message.
Collects wastes produced by the cells and removes the wastes from the body.
The skeletal system, muscular system, respiratory system, nervous system, cardiovascular system, excretory system, and endocrine system.
What are the functions of the respiratory system?
Bones make red blood cells.
Cells, tissue, organs, organ systems.
The 3 main parts are the heart, blood, and blood vessels. It carries needed substances to cells. It carries waste products away from the cells. The blood contains cells that fight disease.
Your skin is the largest organ of your body. Your skin covers and protects your body from injuries, infections, and water loss. Your skin helps regulate body temperature. Your skin helps gather information about the environment. Your skin produces Vitamin D. Your skin helps to eliminate waste. Your skin has two layers, the thinner outer epidermis, and the thicker inner layer, the dermis.
To break down food into molecules your body can use. Also, to absorb the molecules into the blood and carry them throughout the body. To eliminate waste from the body.
To move oxygen from the outside of the environment into your body. Also, to remove carbon dioxide and water from the body.
206 bones.
There are 600 muscles in your body. Involuntary muscles are not under your conscious control. Voluntary muscles are under your conscious control. Muscle work in pairs, because they can only contract, not extend.
It produces chemicals that control many of the body’s daily activities. It also regulates long-term changes such as growth and development.
Homeostasis is the process by which an organism’s internal environment is kept stable in spite of changes in the external environment.
Steel.
Provides shape and support, enables your body to move, protects your organs, produces blood cells, stores minerals until you body needs them.
A group of organs that work together to perform a major function.
The brain is part of this system. It is like a computer that controls the body’s functions, and the nervous system is the network that relays the messages to the parts of the body (by way of the spinal cord). Receives information about what is happening both inside and outside your body. Directs the way in which your body responds to the information. Helps maintain homeostasis.
3 types of blood vessels: arteries, capillaries, veins. Arteries carry blood away from the heart and enter tiny, narrow vessels called capillaries. From there the blood flows into veins which carry the blood back to the heart. The right side of the heart pumps blood to the lungs. The left side of the heart pumps blood to the rest of the body. The path blood flows through the body in two loops. In the first loop it travels from the heart to the lungs and then back to the heart. In the second loop the blood travels from the heart throughout the body and then back to the heart. There are 2 types of blood cells: red and white. Red blood cells take up oxygen in the lungs and deliver it to cells everywhere in the body. White blood cells are the body’s disease fighters.
The most common blood type is O+
The Cerebrum, Cerebellum, and the Brainstem. The Cerebrum tells everybody what to do, the Cerebellum carries out/organizes what needs to be done, and the Brainstem sends out the message.
Collects wastes produced by the cells and removes the wastes from the body.
The skeletal system, muscular system, respiratory system, nervous system, cardiovascular system, excretory system, and endocrine system.
What are the 3 main functions of the digestive system?
Bones make red blood cells.
Cells, tissue, organs, organ systems.
The 3 main parts are the heart, blood, and blood vessels. It carries needed substances to cells. It carries waste products away from the cells. The blood contains cells that fight disease.
Your skin is the largest organ of your body. Your skin covers and protects your body from injuries, infections, and water loss. Your skin helps regulate body temperature. Your skin helps gather information about the environment. Your skin produces Vitamin D. Your skin helps to eliminate waste. Your skin has two layers, the thinner outer epidermis, and the thicker inner layer, the dermis.
To break down food into molecules your body can use. Also, to absorb the molecules into the blood and carry them throughout the body. To eliminate waste from the body.
To move oxygen from the outside of the environment into your body. Also, to remove carbon dioxide and water from the body.
206 bones.
There are 600 muscles in your body. Involuntary muscles are not under your conscious control. Voluntary muscles are under your conscious control. Muscle work in pairs, because they can only contract, not extend.
It produces chemicals that control many of the body’s daily activities. It also regulates long-term changes such as growth and development.
Homeostasis is the process by which an organism’s internal environment is kept stable in spite of changes in the external environment.
Steel.
Provides shape and support, enables your body to move, protects your organs, produces blood cells, stores minerals until you body needs them.
A group of organs that work together to perform a major function.
The brain is part of this system. It is like a computer that controls the body’s functions, and the nervous system is the network that relays the messages to the parts of the body (by way of the spinal cord). Receives information about what is happening both inside and outside your body. Directs the way in which your body responds to the information. Helps maintain homeostasis.
3 types of blood vessels: arteries, capillaries, veins. Arteries carry blood away from the heart and enter tiny, narrow vessels called capillaries. From there the blood flows into veins which carry the blood back to the heart. The right side of the heart pumps blood to the lungs. The left side of the heart pumps blood to the rest of the body. The path blood flows through the body in two loops. In the first loop it travels from the heart to the lungs and then back to the heart. In the second loop the blood travels from the heart throughout the body and then back to the heart. There are 2 types of blood cells: red and white. Red blood cells take up oxygen in the lungs and deliver it to cells everywhere in the body. White blood cells are the body’s disease fighters.
The most common blood type is O+
The Cerebrum, Cerebellum, and the Brainstem. The Cerebrum tells everybody what to do, the Cerebellum carries out/organizes what needs to be done, and the Brainstem sends out the message.
Collects wastes produced by the cells and removes the wastes from the body.
The skeletal system, muscular system, respiratory system, nervous system, cardiovascular system, excretory system, and endocrine system.
What are 4 functions of the nervous system?
Bones make red blood cells.
Cells, tissue, organs, organ systems.
The 3 main parts are the heart, blood, and blood vessels. It carries needed substances to cells. It carries waste products away from the cells. The blood contains cells that fight disease.
Your skin is the largest organ of your body. Your skin covers and protects your body from injuries, infections, and water loss. Your skin helps regulate body temperature. Your skin helps gather information about the environment. Your skin produces Vitamin D. Your skin helps to eliminate waste. Your skin has two layers, the thinner outer epidermis, and the thicker inner layer, the dermis.
To break down food into molecules your body can use. Also, to absorb the molecules into the blood and carry them throughout the body. To eliminate waste from the body.
To move oxygen from the outside of the environment into your body. Also, to remove carbon dioxide and water from the body.
206 bones.
There are 600 muscles in your body. Involuntary muscles are not under your conscious control. Voluntary muscles are under your conscious control. Muscle work in pairs, because they can only contract, not extend.
It produces chemicals that control many of the body’s daily activities. It also regulates long-term changes such as growth and development.
Homeostasis is the process by which an organism’s internal environment is kept stable in spite of changes in the external environment.
Steel.
Provides shape and support, enables your body to move, protects your organs, produces blood cells, stores minerals until you body needs them.
A group of organs that work together to perform a major function.
The brain is part of this system. It is like a computer that controls the body’s functions, and the nervous system is the network that relays the messages to the parts of the body (by way of the spinal cord). Receives information about what is happening both inside and outside your body. Directs the way in which your body responds to the information. Helps maintain homeostasis.
3 types of blood vessels: arteries, capillaries, veins. Arteries carry blood away from the heart and enter tiny, narrow vessels called capillaries. From there the blood flows into veins which carry the blood back to the heart. The right side of the heart pumps blood to the lungs. The left side of the heart pumps blood to the rest of the body. The path blood flows through the body in two loops. In the first loop it travels from the heart to the lungs and then back to the heart. In the second loop the blood travels from the heart throughout the body and then back to the heart. There are 2 types of blood cells: red and white. Red blood cells take up oxygen in the lungs and deliver it to cells everywhere in the body. White blood cells are the body’s disease fighters.
The most common blood type is O+
The Cerebrum, Cerebellum, and the Brainstem. The Cerebrum tells everybody what to do, the Cerebellum carries out/organizes what needs to be done, and the Brainstem sends out the message.
Collects wastes produced by the cells and removes the wastes from the body.
The skeletal system, muscular system, respiratory system, nervous system, cardiovascular system, excretory system, and endocrine system.
What are some facts about blood?
Bones make red blood cells.
Cells, tissue, organs, organ systems.
The 3 main parts are the heart, blood, and blood vessels. It carries needed substances to cells. It carries waste products away from the cells. The blood contains cells that fight disease.
Your skin is the largest organ of your body. Your skin covers and protects your body from injuries, infections, and water loss. Your skin helps regulate body temperature. Your skin helps gather information about the environment. Your skin produces Vitamin D. Your skin helps to eliminate waste. Your skin has two layers, the thinner outer epidermis, and the thicker inner layer, the dermis.
To break down food into molecules your body can use. Also, to absorb the molecules into the blood and carry them throughout the body. To eliminate waste from the body.
To move oxygen from the outside of the environment into your body. Also, to remove carbon dioxide and water from the body.
206 bones.
There are 600 muscles in your body. Involuntary muscles are not under your conscious control. Voluntary muscles are under your conscious control. Muscle work in pairs, because they can only contract, not extend.
It produces chemicals that control many of the body’s daily activities. It also regulates long-term changes such as growth and development.
Homeostasis is the process by which an organism’s internal environment is kept stable in spite of changes in the external environment.
Steel.
Provides shape and support, enables your body to move, protects your organs, produces blood cells, stores minerals until you body needs them.
A group of organs that work together to perform a major function.
The brain is part of this system. It is like a computer that controls the body’s functions, and the nervous system is the network that relays the messages to the parts of the body (by way of the spinal cord). Receives information about what is happening both inside and outside your body. Directs the way in which your body responds to the information. Helps maintain homeostasis.
3 types of blood vessels: arteries, capillaries, veins. Arteries carry blood away from the heart and enter tiny, narrow vessels called capillaries. From there the blood flows into veins which carry the blood back to the heart. The right side of the heart pumps blood to the lungs. The left side of the heart pumps blood to the rest of the body. The path blood flows through the body in two loops. In the first loop it travels from the heart to the lungs and then back to the heart. In the second loop the blood travels from the heart throughout the body and then back to the heart. There are 2 types of blood cells: red and white. Red blood cells take up oxygen in the lungs and deliver it to cells everywhere in the body. White blood cells are the body’s disease fighters.
The most common blood type is O+
The Cerebrum, Cerebellum, and the Brainstem. The Cerebrum tells everybody what to do, the Cerebellum carries out/organizes what needs to be done, and the Brainstem sends out the message.
Collects wastes produced by the cells and removes the wastes from the body.
The skeletal system, muscular system, respiratory system, nervous system, cardiovascular system, excretory system, and endocrine system.
What are the 3 parts and functions of the Cardiovascular System?
Bones make red blood cells.
Cells, tissue, organs, organ systems.
The 3 main parts are the heart, blood, and blood vessels. It carries needed substances to cells. It carries waste products away from the cells. The blood contains cells that fight disease.
Your skin is the largest organ of your body. Your skin covers and protects your body from injuries, infections, and water loss. Your skin helps regulate body temperature. Your skin helps gather information about the environment. Your skin produces Vitamin D. Your skin helps to eliminate waste. Your skin has two layers, the thinner outer epidermis, and the thicker inner layer, the dermis.
To break down food into molecules your body can use. Also, to absorb the molecules into the blood and carry them throughout the body. To eliminate waste from the body.
To move oxygen from the outside of the environment into your body. Also, to remove carbon dioxide and water from the body.
206 bones.
There are 600 muscles in your body. Involuntary muscles are not under your conscious control. Voluntary muscles are under your conscious control. Muscle work in pairs, because they can only contract, not extend.
It produces chemicals that control many of the body’s daily activities. It also regulates long-term changes such as growth and development.
Homeostasis is the process by which an organism’s internal environment is kept stable in spite of changes in the external environment.
Steel.
Provides shape and support, enables your body to move, protects your organs, produces blood cells, stores minerals until you body needs them.
A group of organs that work together to perform a major function.
The brain is part of this system. It is like a computer that controls the body’s functions, and the nervous system is the network that relays the messages to the parts of the body (by way of the spinal cord). Receives information about what is happening both inside and outside your body. Directs the way in which your body responds to the information. Helps maintain homeostasis.
3 types of blood vessels: arteries, capillaries, veins. Arteries carry blood away from the heart and enter tiny, narrow vessels called capillaries. From there the blood flows into veins which carry the blood back to the heart. The right side of the heart pumps blood to the lungs. The left side of the heart pumps blood to the rest of the body. The path blood flows through the body in two loops. In the first loop it travels from the heart to the lungs and then back to the heart. In the second loop the blood travels from the heart throughout the body and then back to the heart. There are 2 types of blood cells: red and white. Red blood cells take up oxygen in the lungs and deliver it to cells everywhere in the body. White blood cells are the body’s disease fighters.
The most common blood type is O+
The Cerebrum, Cerebellum, and the Brainstem. The Cerebrum tells everybody what to do, the Cerebellum carries out/organizes what needs to be done, and the Brainstem sends out the message.
Collects wastes produced by the cells and removes the wastes from the body.
The skeletal system, muscular system, respiratory system, nervous system, cardiovascular system, excretory system, and endocrine system.
Bones make what type of blood cells?
Bones make red blood cells.
Cells, tissue, organs, organ systems.
The 3 main parts are the heart, blood, and blood vessels. It carries needed substances to cells. It carries waste products away from the cells. The blood contains cells that fight disease.
Your skin is the largest organ of your body. Your skin covers and protects your body from injuries, infections, and water loss. Your skin helps regulate body temperature. Your skin helps gather information about the environment. Your skin produces Vitamin D. Your skin helps to eliminate waste. Your skin has two layers, the thinner outer epidermis, and the thicker inner layer, the dermis.
To break down food into molecules your body can use. Also, to absorb the molecules into the blood and carry them throughout the body. To eliminate waste from the body.
To move oxygen from the outside of the environment into your body. Also, to remove carbon dioxide and water from the body.
206 bones.
There are 600 muscles in your body. Involuntary muscles are not under your conscious control. Voluntary muscles are under your conscious control. Muscle work in pairs, because they can only contract, not extend.
It produces chemicals that control many of the body’s daily activities. It also regulates long-term changes such as growth and development.
Homeostasis is the process by which an organism’s internal environment is kept stable in spite of changes in the external environment.
Steel.
Provides shape and support, enables your body to move, protects your organs, produces blood cells, stores minerals until you body needs them.
A group of organs that work together to perform a major function.
The brain is part of this system. It is like a computer that controls the body’s functions, and the nervous system is the network that relays the messages to the parts of the body (by way of the spinal cord). Receives information about what is happening both inside and outside your body. Directs the way in which your body responds to the information. Helps maintain homeostasis.
3 types of blood vessels: arteries, capillaries, veins. Arteries carry blood away from the heart and enter tiny, narrow vessels called capillaries. From there the blood flows into veins which carry the blood back to the heart. The right side of the heart pumps blood to the lungs. The left side of the heart pumps blood to the rest of the body. The path blood flows through the body in two loops. In the first loop it travels from the heart to the lungs and then back to the heart. In the second loop the blood travels from the heart throughout the body and then back to the heart. There are 2 types of blood cells: red and white. Red blood cells take up oxygen in the lungs and deliver it to cells everywhere in the body. White blood cells are the body’s disease fighters.
The most common blood type is O+
The Cerebrum, Cerebellum, and the Brainstem. The Cerebrum tells everybody what to do, the Cerebellum carries out/organizes what needs to be done, and the Brainstem sends out the message.
Collects wastes produced by the cells and removes the wastes from the body.
The skeletal system, muscular system, respiratory system, nervous system, cardiovascular system, excretory system, and endocrine system.
Bones make red blood cells.
Cells, tissue, organs, organ systems.
The 3 main parts are the heart, blood, and blood vessels. It carries needed substances to cells. It carries waste products away from the cells. The blood contains cells that fight disease.
Your skin is the largest organ of your body. Your skin covers and protects your body from injuries, infections, and water loss. Your skin helps regulate body temperature. Your skin helps gather information about the environment. Your skin produces Vitamin D. Your skin helps to eliminate waste. Your skin has two layers, the thinner outer epidermis, and the thicker inner layer, the dermis.
To break down food into molecules your body can use. Also, to absorb the molecules into the blood and carry them throughout the body. To eliminate waste from the body.
To move oxygen from the outside of the environment into your body. Also, to remove carbon dioxide and water from the body.
206 bones.
There are 600 muscles in your body. Involuntary muscles are not under your conscious control. Voluntary muscles are under your conscious control. Muscle work in pairs, because they can only contract, not extend.
It produces chemicals that control many of the body’s daily activities. It also regulates long-term changes such as growth and development.
Homeostasis is the process by which an organism’s internal environment is kept stable in spite of changes in the external environment.
Steel.
Provides shape and support, enables your body to move, protects your organs, produces blood cells, stores minerals until you body needs them.
A group of organs that work together to perform a major function.
The brain is part of this system. It is like a computer that controls the body’s functions, and the nervous system is the network that relays the messages to the parts of the body (by way of the spinal cord). Receives information about what is happening both inside and outside your body. Directs the way in which your body responds to the information. Helps maintain homeostasis.
3 types of blood vessels: arteries, capillaries, veins. Arteries carry blood away from the heart and enter tiny, narrow vessels called capillaries. From there the blood flows into veins which carry the blood back to the heart. The right side of the heart pumps blood to the lungs. The left side of the heart pumps blood to the rest of the body. The path blood flows through the body in two loops. In the first loop it travels from the heart to the lungs and then back to the heart. In the second loop the blood travels from the heart throughout the body and then back to the heart. There are 2 types of blood cells: red and white. Red blood cells take up oxygen in the lungs and deliver it to cells everywhere in the body. White blood cells are the body’s disease fighters.
The most common blood type is O+
The Cerebrum, Cerebellum, and the Brainstem. The Cerebrum tells everybody what to do, the Cerebellum carries out/organizes what needs to be done, and the Brainstem sends out the message.
Collects wastes produced by the cells and removes the wastes from the body.
The skeletal system, muscular system, respiratory system, nervous system, cardiovascular system, excretory system, and endocrine system.
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