In the skull (22):
Cranial bones:
frontal bone
parietal bone (2)
temporal bone (2)
occipital bone
sphenoid bone
ethmoid bone
Facial bones:
mandible
maxilla (2)
palatine bone (2)
zygomatic bone (2)
nasal bone (2)
lacrimal bone (2)
vomer bone
inferior nasal conchae (2)
In the middle ears (6):
malleus (2)
incus (2)
stapes (2)
In the throat (1):
hyoid bone
In the shoulder girdle (4):
scapula or shoulder blade (2)
clavicle or collarbone (2)
In the thorax (25):
sternum
ribs (2 x 12)
In the vertebral column (24):
cervical vertebrae (7) incl. atlas & axis
thoracic vertebrae (12)
lumbar vertebrae (5)
In the arms (6):
humerus (2)
radius (2)
ulna (2)
In the hands (54):
Wrist (carpal) bones:
scaphoid bone (2)
lunate bone (2)
triquetral bone (2)
pisiform bone (2)
trapezium (2)
trapezoid bone (2)
capitate bone (2)
hamate bone (2)
Palm or metacarpal bones:
metacarpal bones (5 × 2)
Finger bones or phalanges:
proximal phalanges (5 × 2)
intermediate phalanges (4 × 2)
distal phalanges (5 × 2)
In the pelvis (4):
coccyx
sacrum
ossa coxae (hip bones or innominate bones) (2)
In the legs (8):
femur (2)
patella (2)
tibia (2)
fibula (2)
In the feet (52):
Ankle (tarsal) bones:
calcaneus (heel bone) (2)
talus (2)
navicular bone (2)
medial cuneiform bone (2)
intermediate cuneiform bone (2)
lateral cuneiform bone (2)
cuboid bone (2)
Instep bones:
metatarsal bone (5 × 2)
Toe bones:
proximal phalanges (5 × 2)
intermediate phalanges (4 × 2)
distal phalanges (5 × 2)
The infant skeleton has the following bones in addition to those above:
sacral vertebrae (4 or 5), which fuse in adults to form the sacrum
coccygeal vertebrae (3 to 5), which fuse in adults to form the coccyx
ilium, ischium and pubis, which fuse in adults to form the pelvic girdle
2007-10-29 16:20:16
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answer #1
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answered by judas 2
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I remember this in anatomy!!! This was our hardest anatomy exam of the year. Our professor said everyone usually does bad on this one. But don't worry, I have a few tricks up my sleeve. First, learn the bone terms. For example, know what tubrucle, groove, and fissure mean. If you know the definition of these words it helps to determine the name and remember the name of the bone. For instance, if you are looking at the humerous and you know that the medial epicondyle is above the condyle! REPITION: just keep looking at the structure and try to remember it. do not move to the next structure until you learn that bone. Compare the bones to your bones of the body. For the radius and ulnar i remember it in alphebetal order. The R is on the oustide and U is in the inside. Just little tricks. Pretty must the humerous and femar have heads and that is easy to memorize. USE acronyms! when you look at the bone organize the parts and make up a funny sentence or something. Really you just need to study!! Good luck!!!!
2016-05-26 01:25:04
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answer #2
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answered by iva 3
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1-9. cranium
7. mandible
In the middle ears (6):
malleus
incus
stapes
In the throat (1):
hyoid
In the shoulder girdle (4):
25. clavicle
29. scapula
In the thorax (25):
10. sternum
28. ribs
In the vertebral column (26):
8. cervical vertebrae
thoracic vertebrae
14. lumbar vertebrae
16. sacrum
coccyx
In the arms (6):
11. humerus
26. condyles of humerus
12. ulna
13. radius
27. head of radius
In the hands (54):
carpals:
scaphoid
lunate
triquetrum
pisiform
trapezium
trapezoid
capitate
hamate
metacarpals
phalanges:
proximal phalanges
intermediate phalanges
distal phalanges
In the pelvis (2):
15. ilium and ischium
In the legs (8):
18. femur
17. hip joint (joint, not bone)
22. greater trochanter of femur
23. condyles of femur
19. patella
20. tibia
21. fibula
In the feet (52):
tarsals:
calcaneus
talus
navicular bone
medial cuneiform bone
intermediate cuneiform bone
lateral cuneiform bone
cuboidal bone
metatarsals
phalanges:
proximal phalanges
intermediate phalanges
distal phalanges
Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_bones_of_the_human_skeleton"
2007-10-29 16:13:54
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answer #3
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answered by bob 6
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If you really wanted this information, you would find it in any basic biology text, or in a simple first aid book - but in fact, there aren't names for all the bones. The ribs, for example, don't have individual names, nor do the phlanges.
2007-10-29 16:14:13
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answer #4
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answered by old lady 7
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_bones_of_the_human_skeleton
http://www.bartleby.com/107/17.html
and
http://www.bartleby.com/107/26.html
You can get them here (the bones I mean): http://www.boneroom.com/bone/humanbones.html
2007-10-29 16:15:16
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answer #5
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answered by Dan S 7
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Check out this web-site
http://www.public-action.com/SkyWriter/WacoMuseum/library/bones2.html
2007-10-29 16:14:47
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answer #6
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answered by Nicole 3
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the thingy
2007-10-29 16:15:45
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answer #7
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answered by The dude 3
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go there:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_bones_of_the_human_skeleton
2007-10-29 16:18:01
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answer #8
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answered by Brandi F 1
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