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B1 Intermediate English 14:55 Educational

The Skeletal System

Professor Dave Explains · 4,111,017 views · Added 1 month ago

Learning Stats

B1

CEFR Level

5/10

Difficulty

Subtitles (145 segments)

00:00

Professor Dave again, let’s look at the human skeleton.

00:10

Now that we’ve learned about the structure of bones, we are ready to take a look at how

00:14

they are assembled in the body.

00:17

The skeletal system is comprised mainly of bones, around two hundred and six of them

00:23

in an adult to be specific, but there is also a good amount of cartilage, joints, and ligaments,

00:30

which all together make up around twenty percent of a person’s body mass.

00:34

We will get to joints a little bit later, first let’s check out all the different

00:39

bones in the body.

00:42

As we recall, there are two sections to the human skeleton, those being the axial skeleton,

00:48

made of the skull, vertebral column, and thoracic cage, and the appendicular skeleton, made

00:56

more or less of just the limbs.

00:58

Let’s go through the axial skeleton first, starting at the top with the skull.

01:05

The skull is a fascinating structure, made of twenty two different bones.

01:11

Cranial bones are the ones that protect the brain, and facial bones are the ones that

01:16

give structure to the face.

01:19

Most of the bones in the skull are flat bones, and in the cranium these are connected at

01:24

serrated lines called sutures.

01:28

The cranium is made of a vault, as well as a base, and we should note that the base is

01:35

divided into the anterior, middle, and posterior cranial fossae.

01:41

Together, these produce the cranial cavity, where the brain sits.

01:47

There are also ear cavities and nasal cavities, as well as orbits, which house the eyes.

01:55

All together there are eight cranial bones.

01:58

There is the frontal bone, two large parietal bones, the occipital bone, two temporal bones,

02:08

the sphenoid bone, and the ethmoid bone.

02:13

The cranial bones are connected, as we said, by sutures, and those have specific names

02:19

as well.

02:20

These are the coronal, sagittal, lambdoid, squamous, and occipitomastoid sutures.

02:33

We should also mention the foramina, which are holes that nerves and arteries and veins

02:38

pass through, most notably the foramen magnum at the base of the skull through which the

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