The tricept is located under the bicept.
Sorry, however the tricep is just the muscle at the lower arm.
The bone under the bicep is the humerus.
***If you are asking this for the answer to a crossword puzzle, the correct answer is ULNA***
It is called the Brachialis and it gives the bicep the bulky appearance....in essence it is what you are actually working out on the workout machines that say they workout your Biceps.
The humerus
the bicep is located in your arm
Yes on either side of your heart under the collar bone.
The bicep on the front and the tricep on the back.
biceps is a kind of muscle, rib is a kind of bone.
The bicep is the front part of your arm. The tricep is the muscle in the back part of the arm.
Type your answer here... sternum
anterior superior potions of the arm
The Brachial artery provides passage for oxygen rich blood supply to the arm. It is located in the upper arm on the inside between the bicep & tricep muscles againsed the humorous bone. This is the prefered place to check for an infavts pulse.
It is. In fact, it is your shoulder which is right under your neck.
A torn bicep muscle can usually occur when your bicep muscle is fully extended and under too much pressure. Weight lifters often get a torn bicep muscle when doing the preacher curl. The preacher curl can really strain the bicep muscle, and lead to a torn bicep muscle if you are lifting to much weight or have not warmed up correctly. Your bicep is a muscle on your arm. it is the muscle that you usually flex when trying to show off your srength. Most torn bicep muscle injuries occur when the arm is fully extended and the lifter is just about to pull the weight back up. When you get a torn bicep muscle you will feel an immediate sharp pain in your bicep near your elbow, followed by bicep muscle weakness and stiffness and eventaully bruising.
The Humerus Would be the upper bone near the bicep. The lower two bones are the Radius, and the Ulna. The Radius follows the thumb, and crosses when you twist your wrist.
it is located mainly in the proximal and distal epiphysis (the ends of a bone.)