What This Document Is
This document is a review sheet for Exercise 10, focusing on the appendicular skeleton – the bones of the limbs and their attachments to the axial skeleton. It’s designed for students in Human Anatomy and Physiology I (BSC 2085) at Miami Dade College, specifically to reinforce learning from a lab exercise. The review sheet utilizes a variety of question types, including fill-in-the-blank, matching, and identification of anatomical landmarks.
Why This Document Matters
This review sheet is a crucial tool for students preparing for assessments on the appendicular skeleton. It’s used *after* a lab session to solidify understanding of bone names, features, and relationships. Successfully completing this review sheet indicates a grasp of key anatomical structures essential for understanding movement, support, and protection within the human body. It’s particularly valuable for visual learners, as it connects names to specific locations on skeletal diagrams.
Common Limitations or Challenges
This review sheet is a *review* tool, not a comprehensive lesson. It assumes prior knowledge gained from lectures, textbooks, and the lab exercise itself. It doesn’t provide detailed explanations of *why* structures are shaped the way they are or their functional significance beyond basic attachment points. It also doesn’t cover clinical correlations or pathologies related to the appendicular skeleton.
What This Document Provides
This review sheet includes the following:
* Fill-in-the-blank questions to test recall of bone names in the pectoral girdle and upper limb.
* Matching exercises to connect bone markings (e.g., glenoid cavity, olecranon fossa) with their descriptions.
* Identification tasks requiring students to label anatomical landmarks on diagrams of the scapula, radius, and ulna.
* Questions about the bones of the pelvic girdle and lower limb, comparing it to the pectoral girdle.
* Specific prompts to name bone markings forming proximal and distal radioulnar joints.
* A matching exercise for bones of the anterior view of the hand.
This preview *does not* include answers to the questions, completed diagrams, or detailed explanations of anatomical functions. It only represents a sample of the content within the full review sheet.