Sunday, September 26, 2010

Homeostasis Lab

Organization of the Body

Here are the different organizational levels of the body.
There are six different organizational levels which all contribute to the complexity of the human body. They range from tiny things not visible to the human eye, to your body. All of these levels have a relationship to each other in one way or another.

  1. Chemical Level - This is the simplest level of the structural pyramid. It consists of other units like atoms, molecules, macromolecules, and organelles.
    1. Atoms - Atoms are the tiniest building blocks of matter, they combine to form molecules.
    2. Molecules - Molecules are two or more atoms that are formed together by a chemical bond, they form organelles.
      1. Macromolecules - Macromolecules are very large molecules that form different polymers.
    3. Organelles - Organelles are the basic components that make up the microscopic cells.
  2. Cellular Level - The cellular level consists of many different types of cells that help form tissues.This is the level that the simplest living creatures stop at.
  3. Tissue Level - Tissues are groups of cells that all have cells with similar functions. There are four different kinds of tissues in the human body.
    1. Epithelium - Covers the body surface, lines the internal cavities, and forms glands.
    2. Muscle - Provides movement to our bodies
    3. Connective - A primary tissue; form and function vary extensively. Functions include supprort, storage, and protection.
    4. Nervous - Provides a means of rapid internal communication by transmitting electrical impulses.
  4. Organ Level - Organs are all made up of different types of tissues. This level allows extremely complex functions to become possible.
  5. Organ System Level - Organs that work together to accomplish a common purpose make up an organ system.
  6. Organismal Level - This is the highest level of organization, and an example would be the human body. It represents the sum total of all structural levels working together to pursue the continuance of life.

Saturday, September 18, 2010

Homeostasis

Have you ever been running on a hot day and started sweating? Or out in the snow and started to shiver? Do you know why your body does either of these? In fact these are just two of the many things that your body can do to maintain a normal body temperature. Homeostasis is the ability to maintain a relatively stable internal condition even though the outside world is a ever changing environment.


Everyone sweats and many may think that it makes you hotter, but it actually makes you cooler. It is our bodies easiest way to cool down, and without it we wouldn't be able to stand the heat our body gives off naturally. We all sweat throughout the day and even when we are doing simple activities like laying down or watching TV, basically you sweat for a good portion of the day. That is why you are supposed to drink at least a liter of water a day. Because when you are running on a hot day you can have as many as two million sweat glands trying to cool your body down.


I've always thought that shivering was one of the weirdest functions a body went through, but it actually has a purpose. It is triggered by the brain, which constantly sensors our temperature, and if we get to cold we shiver to warm up. Shivering is actually when the muscles expand and contract quickly, which burns a lot of energy and is usually the bodies last resort to get to a normal temperature. Another way the body stays warm is by increasing metabolism, just another way to burn energy and produce heat.

Without Homeostasis we would all inevitably overheat and die, or die of hypothermia. It is one of the many amazing functions the body has though, thankfully it is a subconscious function that we don't have to monitor.

This is what the body does to maintain a normal homeostasis.