sarcodinians
Sections of the lungs are called lobes. The right lung has 3 lobes and the left lung has two, which allows room for the heart.
The cerebrum has four pairs of lobes lobes. The two frontal lobes control behavior and language production, and is also called the motor cortex. The two parietal lobes, are also called the sensory cortex, and they process input from our senses. The temporal lobes process auditory information, language comprehension, and the sense of taste. The occipital lobes process visual input. The cerebellum is responsible for gross and fine body movements, and coordination.
horns! The largest are the lateral ventricles in the two cerebral hemispheres their extensions into the lobes of the cerebrum are called horns.
two equal lobes.
The Gnostic Area
Lobes. The breakdown is frontal lobes, occipital lobes, parietal lobes, and temporal lobes
Polymorphonnuclear is an adjective describing a leukocyte as having a nuclei with several lobes and a cytoplasm containing granules.
The divisions of the lungs are called lobes. The right lung has three lobes (upper, middle, lower), while the left lung has two lobes (upper and lower).
The lobes in the back of the brain called the occipital lobes.
lobes
Cam lobes
Sections of the lungs are called lobes. The right lung has 3 lobes and the left lung has two, which allows room for the heart.
hemispheres
The larger structures are called lobes.
The cerebrum has four pairs of lobes lobes. The two frontal lobes control behavior and language production, and is also called the motor cortex. The two parietal lobes, are also called the sensory cortex, and they process input from our senses. The temporal lobes process auditory information, language comprehension, and the sense of taste. The occipital lobes process visual input. The cerebellum is responsible for gross and fine body movements, and coordination.
The secondary bronchi go into the LOBES of the right and left lung. There are 3 lobes in the right lung and 2 lobes in the left lung, both having lobar bronchi.
The Testis is divided into a number of lobes by connective tissue. Each of these lobes contains one to four Semiferous Tubules, which converge to empty sperm into another set of tubules called the Rete Testis.