Skeletal System
Skeletal System
Skeletal System
The skeletal system functions as the basic framework of a body and the entire body are built around the
hard framework of Skeleton. It is the combination of all the bones and tissues associated with cartilages
and joints. Almost all the rigid or solid parts of the body are the main components of the skeletal system.
Joints play an important role in the skeletal system as it helps in permitting the different types of
movements at different locations. If the skeleton were without joints, then there would be no sign of the
movements in the human body.
Skeletal System Anatomy
This skeletal system can be divided into the axial and appendicular systems. In an adult body, it is
mainly composed of 206 individual bones which are organized into two main divisions:
Axial skeleton
Appendicular skeleton.
Axial skeleton
The axial skeleton runs along the body’s central axis, therefore it is called ad the central core of the
human body. The axial skeleton is composed of 80 bones and it consists of:
1. Skull Bone – It includes 8 cranial bones, 14 facial bones, 6 auditory ossicles, and the Hyoid Bone
2. The bone of the Thoracic Cage – It includes 25 bones of the thorax- a breastbone and 24 ribs.
3. The bone of the Vertebral column- It includes 24 vertebrae bones, the sacrum bone, and the
coccyx bone.
Appendicular skeleton
The appendicular skeleton is composed of 126 bones and it comprises of the-
1. Pelvic girdle
2. Upper Limbs
3. Lower Limbs
4. Shoulder Girdle or the Pectoral
Human Skeleton
Appendicular skeleton.
The appendicular skeleton consists of the limbs and girdles. It made up of 126 bones and is divided into
six major regions which includes
Muscles
Muscles are specialized tissues which assist bones in locomotion. Muscles cover the bones present in
our body and are attached to bones by the tissues called tendons. Muscles and bones together help us
in movements.
Bending and stretching of a body part is an outcome of contraction and relaxation of corresponding
muscles present in that region. Joints help in the flexibility of bones but a bone could not be bent or
stretched until a muscle acts on it. When we have to bend a body part, muscles attached to that bone
pulls it to the direction of movement. This is because a muscle can only pull they always work as a pair.
For example, when we bend our arm, muscles at that region contract, become shorter and stiffer and
pull the bones to the direction of movement. Then for relaxation (stretching), muscles at opposite
direction have to pull the bones towards it.
Muscle Movement
Muscles and bones are a combination of locomotion, but this combination is not necessarily always happen
especially in boneless animals.