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September 25, 2021

NEGROS ORIENTAL STATE UNIVERSITY


Anatomy and Physiology
BSED SCI 14 – B

Name: June Maris C. Tumogsoc Score: __________


Year and Section: BSED III-Section Schedule: TTH (3:00-4:00PM)

Human Anatomy and Physiology


Worksheet 1

I. Identify the movements, planes, and body positions illustrated.

1. Transverse Plane
2. Sagittal Plane
3. Coronal Plane
II. Draw and describe a person in anatomical position.

The person that I drew is in a Flexion Anatomical Position. Flexion is a movement, generally in the sagittal plane,
that decreases the angle of the joint and brings two bones closer together and the muscle of the person that I drew
crossed on the anterior side of a joint which made it produce flexion.
III. Label the parts of the microscope and give the functions of each part.

Functions of the Parts of a Microscope

1. Ocular (Eyepiece Lens): the


lens at the top that you look
through, usually 10x or 15x
power.
2. Body Tube: Connects the
eyepiece to the objective
lenses.
3. Arm: Supports the tube and
connects it to the base.
4. Base: The bottom of the microscope, used for support.
5. Stage: The flat platform where you place your slides.
6. Stage clips: These clips hold the slides in place. If your microscope has a mechanical stage, you will be able to move the
slide around by turning two knobs. One moves it left and right, the other moves it up and down.
7. Revolving Nosepiece or Turret: This is the part of the microscope that holds two or more objective lenses and can be
rotated to easily change power.
8. Objective Lenses: Usually you will find 3 or 4 objective lenses on a microscope. They almost always consist of 4x, 10x,
40x and 100x powers.
9. Diaphragm or Iris: Many microscopes have a rotating disk under the stage. This diaphragm has different sized holes and
is used to vary the intensity and size of the cone of light that is projected upward into the slide.
10. Coarse Adjustment Knob: The coarse adjustment knob located on the arm of the microscope moves the stage up and
down to bring the specimen into focus. The gearing mechanism of the adjustment produces a large vertical movement of
the stage with only a partial revolution of the knob.
11. Fine Adjustment Knob: This knob is inside the coarse adjustment knob and is used to bring the specimen into sharp focus
under low power and is used for all focusing when using high power lenses.
12. Mirror: Used to direct light from the light source to the microscopic field.

IV. Give at least 10 laboratory safety rules.


1. Follow your teacher’s instruction, always.
2. Know the location of the safety equipment.
3. Dress for the lab.
4. Don’t eat or drink in the laboratory.
5. Don’t taste or sniff chemicals.
6. Don’t play mad scientist in the laboratory. Only perform what you are instructed to do.
7. Dispose lab waste properly.
8. Do not panic when accidents in the lab happens. Instead, think of a solution.
9. Leave experiments at the lab
10. Do not experiment on your self.

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