Facts About The
Human Body
- Humans are the only
animals capable of drawing a straight line.
- Women blink twice as
often as men.
- There are over 100
viruses causing running nose.
- Human DNA contains
80.000 genes.
- Fingernails grow 4
times faster than toenails.
- Human brain produces
100.000 chemical reactions per second.
- Total weight of
bacteria living in the human body is 4.4 lbs.
- The human eye is
capable of differentiating 10.000.000 hues.
- The smallest cells in
the male body are sperm cells.
- Babies are born
without kneecaps, which form only at the age of 2 to 6.
- Every human bends her
finger 25 million times in a lifetime.
- The are nearly 46
miles of nerves in an adult's body.
- Human brain generates more
electric impulses in a day than all telephones of the world combined.
- In a lifetime, female
body produces 7 million egg cells.
- The area of human
lungs' surface is equal to that of a tennis court.
- On average, an
individual grows over 450 miles of har in a lifetime.
- There are
approximately 40.000 bacteria in the human mouth.
- The strongest muscle
in the human body is the tongue.
- Human body contains
enough fat to produce seven pieces of soap.
- Nearly half of all
human bones are located in wrists and feet.
- There are
approximately 2.000 taste buds in the human body.
- An adult person makes
approximately 23.000 breaths a day.
The Skeletal System
- The largest bone is
the pelvis, or hip bone. In fact it is made of six bones joined firmly
together.
- The longest bone is
the 'femur', in the thigh. It makes up almost one quarter of the body's total
height.
- The smallest bone is
the 'stirrup', deep in the ear. It is hardly larger than a grain of rice.
- The ears and end of
the nose do not have bones inside them. Their inner supports are
cartilage or 'gristle',
which is lighter and more flexible than bone. This is why the nose and
ears can be bent.
- After death, cartilage
rots faster than bone. This is why the skulls of skeletons have no nose or
ears.
The Muscular System
- There are about 60
muscles in the face. Smiling is easier than frowning. It takes 20 muscles to
smile and over 40 to
frown.
- The longest muscle in
the body is the sartorius, from the outside of the hip, down and across
to the inside of the
knee. It rotates the thigh outwards and bends the knee.
- The smallest muscle in
the body is the stapedius, deep in the ear. It is only 5mm long and
thinner than cotton
thread. It is involved in hearing.
- The biggest muscle in
the body is the gluteus maximus, in the buttock. It pulls the leg
backwards powerfully for
walking, running and climbing steps.
The Circulatory System
- The heart beats around
3 billion times in the average person's life.
- About 2 million blood
cells die in the human body every second, and the same number are
born each second.
- Within a tiny droplet
of blood, there are some 5 million red blood cells, 300,000 platelets and
10,000 white cells.
- It takes about 1
minute for a red blood cell to circle the whole body.
- Red blood cells make
approximately 250,000 round trips of the body before returning to the
bone marrow, where they
were born, to die.
- Red blood cells may
live for about 4 months circulating throughout the body, feeding the 60
trillion other body
cells.
The Nervous System
- The brain looks like a
giant, wrinkled walnut.
- Unlike other body
cells, brain cells can not regenerate. Once brain cells are damaged they are
not replaced.
- The brain and spinal
cord are surrounded and protected by cerebrospinal fluid.
The Immune System
- The skin secretes
antibacterial substances. These substances explain why you don't wake up
in the morning with a
layer of mold growing on your skin - most bacteria and spores that land
on the skin die quickly.
- Tears and mucus
contain an enzyme (lysozyme) that breaks down the cell wall of many
bacteria.
- Lymph nodes contain
filtering tissue and a large number of lymph cells. When fighting certain
bacterial infections,
the lymph nodes swell with bacteria and the cells fighting the bacteria, to
the point where you can
actually feel them. Swollen lymph nodes may therefore be a good
indication that you have
an infection of some sort.
2
The Digestive System
- Adults eat about 500
kg of food per year.
- 1.5 litres of saliva
are produced each day.
- The oesophagus is
approximately 25cm long.
- Muscles contract in
waves to move the food down the oesophagus. This means that food
would get to a person's
stomach, even if they were standing on their head.
- An adult’s stomach can
hold approximately 1.5 litres of material.
- Every day 11.5 litres
of digested food, liquids and digestive juices flow through the digestive
system, but only 100 mls
of fluid are lost in faeces.
- In the mouth, food is
either cooled or warmed to a more suitable temperature.
- We get two sets of
teeth. Our 20 'Baby Teeth’ are replaced starting at around 6-7 years of age
with our 32 ‘Adult
Teeth’.
The Respiratory System
- At rest, the adult
body takes in and breathes out about 6 litres of air each minute.
- The right lung is
slightly larger than the left.
- Hairs in the nose help
to clean the air we breathe as well as warming it.
- The highest recorded
"sneeze speed" is 165 km per hour.
- The surface area of
the lungs is roughly the same size as a tennis court.
- The capillaries in the
lungs would extend 1,600 kilometres if placed end to end.
- We lose half a litre
of water a day through breathing. This is the water vapour we see when we
breathe onto glass.
- A person at rest
usually breathes between 12 and 15 times a minute.
- The breathing rate is
faster in children and women than in men.
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