Exercise 10: The Appendicular Skeleton

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large socket in the pelvic bone for the head of the femur (thigh bone)

acetabulum

lateral end of the spine of the scapula; clavicle articulation site

acromion

largest tarsal bone

calcaneus

lateral rounded knob on the distal humerus

capitulum

What are the bones of the wrist called?

carpals

a roughened area on the lateral humerus: deltoid attachment site

deltoid tuberosity

area medial to the flaring iliac bones and

false pelvis

longest, strongest bone in body

femur

thin, lateral leg bone

fibula

superiormost margin of the hip bone

iliac crest

three bones that fuse to form the hip bone

ilium, ischium and pubis

rough projection that supports body weight when sitting

ischial tuberosity

lateral ankle projection

lateral malleolus

notch located inferior to the ischial spine

lesser sciatic notch

small bump on the humerus, often called the "funny bone"

medial epicondyle

medial ankle projection

medial malleolus

bones forming the instep of the foot

metatarsal

opening in hip bone formed by the pubic and ischial rami

obturator foramen

posterior depression on the distal humerus

olecranon fossa

kneecap

patella

What is a single finger called?

phalanx

point where the hip bones join anteriorly

pubic symphysis

surface on the ulna that receives the head of the radius

radial notch

two bone markings that form the proximal radioulnar joint

radial notch and radial head

What are the two bones of the forearm?

radius and ulna

joint between axial skeleton and pelvic girdle

sacroiliac joint

tarsal bone that articulates with the tibia

talus

ankle bones

tarsals

What forms the knuckles?

the head of metacarpals

What is the arm bone of the upper limb?

the humerus

What does the metacarpals form?

the palm

medial condyle of the humerus that articulates with the ulna

trochlea

region inferior to the pelvic brim

true pelvis

List the proximal wrist bones from lateral to medial

Scaphoid, lunate, triquetrum and pisiform

The bones that form the pectoral girdle are the

clavicle and scapula

hooklike process; biceps brachii attachment site

coracoid fossa

anterior depression, superior to the trochlea, that receives part of the ulna when bending at the elbow

coronoid fossa

depression in the scapula that articulates with the humerus

glenoid cavity

sites of muscle attachment on the proximal femur

greater and lesser trochanter

permits passage of the sciatic nerve

greater sciatic notch

shinbone

tibia

weight-bearing bone of the leg

tibia

point where the patellar ligament attaches

tibial tuberosity

List the distal wrist bones from lateral to medial

trapezium, trapezoid, capitate and hamate

surface on the radius that receives the head of the ulna

ulna notch

two bone markings that form the distal radioulnar joint

ulnar notch and ulnar head


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