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Interactive Anatomy and Physiology. Expert created easy to understand articles, interactive diagrams and quizzes that explain the structures and functions of the human body systems. Looking for videos and advanced quizzes? Try our partner site Kenhub.
- Skeletal System
Skeletal System. The skeletal system provides our body with...
- Muscular System
Muscular System. The muscular system is made up of three...
- Muscle Physiology
Muscle Physiology. The muscular system is an organ system...
- Nervous System
Nervous System. The nervous system is a system of nerves and...
- Circulatory System
Circulatory System. The circulatory (cardiovascular) system...
- Respiratory System
Respiratory System. The respiratory system is a complex...
- Urinary System
Urinary System. The urinary system is a part of the body...
- Related Resources
Topmarks – an online resource to help teachers, students,...
- Skeletal System
115+ Free Anatomy 4K & HD Stock Videos. Free anatomy videos to use in your next project. Browse amazing footage uploaded by the Pixabay community. Find videos of Anatomy. Royalty-free No attribution required High quality images.
Free artwork designed for presentations, publications, videos, quizzes, and flashcards. Illustrations Simple, colorful, and accurate representations of anatomical structures and physiological processes.
Learn anatomy faster with our 3D human anatomy models. Over 400 models, by region, by structure and by system.
Meet our expert-created anatomy video tutorials. Lasting between 5 - 30 minutes each, our 500+ videos on hundreds of anatomical structures will quickly and effectively teach you everything you need to know about a topic. We’ll even teach you clinically relevant information you can apply to practice.
Innerbody Anatomy Explorer. There are 12 major anatomy systems: Skeletal, Muscular, Cardiovascular, Digestive, Endocrine, Nervous, Respiratory, Immune/Lymphatic, Urinary, Female Reproductive, Male Reproductive, Integumentary. Select a system below to get started.
Much of this information comes through the sensory organs: the eyes, ears, nose, tongue, and skin. Specialized cells and tissues within these organs receive raw stimuli and translate them into signals the nervous system can use.