Materials that the body cannot use are often excreted as waste products. These may include excess minerals, toxins, or certain molecules that are not metabolically useful for the body's functions. The kidneys and liver play important roles in filtering out and removing these unusable materials from the body.
Waste materials that the body cannot use are typically eliminated through urine, feces, sweat, or respiration. These waste materials are processed and filtered by the kidneys, liver, and other organs before being excreted from the body.
Materials that the body cannot use are typically referred to as waste products or byproducts. These are substances that the body either cannot metabolize or does not need, and are typically excreted through processes like urine or feces. Examples include carbon dioxide, urea, and excess electrolytes.
Indigestible materials are substances that cannot be broken down by the digestive system and therefore cannot be absorbed by the body. These materials pass through the digestive tract unchanged and are eventually eliminated in the stool. Some examples include fiber and certain types of plant materials.
Absorbtion takes place in the stomach and intestines. Much of absorption takes place in the small intestines. When materials in the body are not absorbed the body gets rid of them. They are excreted as sweat, urine and stool.
Solid waste that results from digestion is called feces or stool. It is the byproduct of the body's process of breaking down food for nutrients and eliminating waste materials that cannot be used by the body.
Waste materials that the body cannot use are typically eliminated through urine, feces, sweat, or respiration. These waste materials are processed and filtered by the kidneys, liver, and other organs before being excreted from the body.
Materials that the body cannot use are typically referred to as waste products or byproducts. These are substances that the body either cannot metabolize or does not need, and are typically excreted through processes like urine or feces. Examples include carbon dioxide, urea, and excess electrolytes.
Roughage.
no; doing so only gets rid of the food materials that the body cannot make use of once all of the energy has been absorbed into the body
Indigestible materials are substances that cannot be broken down by the digestive system and therefore cannot be absorbed by the body. These materials pass through the digestive tract unchanged and are eventually eliminated in the stool. Some examples include fiber and certain types of plant materials.
Osmosis
"circulatory"
You cannot use just weight to identify a material.You can use density to identify materials.
Due to the current population figures and projections, we cannot continue to use and dispose of materials or we will be living in our neighbor's garbage. The use of non-biodegradable materials must be severely restricted.
Materials that cannot be fossilized include materials that are not organic, such as plastic, glass, and metal. These materials do not contain the necessary organic compounds for fossilization to occur.
digestion.
Assimilation is the use of digested and absorbed materials to make new body parts.