voluntary muscles and cardiac muscles
The "stripes" in the muscle are called striations. Smooth muscle doesn't have the striations.
Striations are cause by pooling of blood after death in the direction of where the body originally was before being moved.My answer would be....The arrangement of myofilaments(actin/ myosin) on a myofibril produce the striations of a skeletal muscle cell . Also myofibrils align to give distinct bands. :)Hope that helps :D
Skeletal muscle which has microscopic alternating bands of light and dark called striations. Therefore it is striated, voluntary muscle.
skeletal muscle tissue
skeletalMuscle
Most of the organs contain smooth muscle. The exception is the heart, which contains cardiac muscle.
The only muscle in the body that is non-striated is the smooth muscle. It does not have any visible striations.
the answer is the muscle tissue ! i got the same packet haha
The endocardiumconsists of epithelium and connective tissue that contains many elastic and collagenousfibers. It also contains blood vessels and some specialized cardiac muscle fibers called purkinjefibers.
cardiac muscle! bone is a type of cardiac muscle?
Muscle tissue
The heart contains cardiac muscle cells. The cells are striated (the muscle fibers contain alternating light and dark bands). They differ from skeletal muscle in that it is an involuntary contraction, but they are similar in that they both have striations.