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skin |
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skinCovering of the body of a vertebrate. In mammals, the outer layer (epidermis) is dead and its cells are constantly being rubbed away and replaced from below; it helps to protect the body from infection and to prevent dehydration. The lower layer (dermis) contains blood vessels, nerves, hair roots, and sweat and sebaceous glands (producing oil), and is supported by a network of fibrous and elastic cells. The medical speciality concerned with skin diseases is called dermatology. The skin helps to protect the body from drying out. It is waterproof and covered with dry, dead cells, so little water is lost from skin cells. However, water is lost from a human body when the body sweats. The skin helps to regulate body temperature. Body temperature is monitored and controlled by the thermoregulatory centre in the brain. This centre has special cells sensitive to the temperature of blood flowing through the brain (receptors). Temperature receptors in the skin also send nerve impulses to this centre giving information about skin temperature. If the body temperature is too high blood vessels supplying the skin capillaries expand (dilate) so that more blood flows through the capillaries and more heat is lost. To further assist heat loss sweat glands release sweat, which cools the body as it evaporates. If the body temperature is too low blood vessels supplying the skin capillaries constrict to reduce the flow of blood through the capillaries. Other than measuring the temperature, the skin senses the environment in several other ways. Some receptors in the skin are sensitive to touch and pressure. If they are stimulated, nerve impulses are sent to the brain carrying information. It also protects the body from disease-causing organisms, which find it hard to penetrate the skin.
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| ? Mentioned in | ? References in periodicals archive | ||
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| Twenty-eight of these signs are distinctive elements, similar to individual letters, that might represent things like corn, eyes, or animal skin. The scientists regard the marks inscribed in the stone as script because they include 28 distinctive elements, such as signs depicting maize, parallel sets of eyes, and an animal skin. Typical ancient copper ingots were shaped in the form of an animal skin, such as the one from Zakros, Crete, shown on this page. |
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