You can see how the respiraotry system works.
year 8 kid
It is called the bell jar because Esther says that she feels that she feels almost as if she has been stuck under a bell jar. Also, the story is comparing the effects of being under a bell jar, which would distort the view/perspective of one beneath it, to the effects of being depressed or living in a world one does not fit in with
You must mean Hapy! (The baboon headed one) :) Yes, Hapy, guarded by Nephthys, protected the lungs.
Sylvia Plath wrote The Bell Jar. However she published it under the pseudonym of Victoria Lucas in 1963. One month after the novel was published Plath committed suicide and the novel was later released under her name.
One can find more information about bell jars when one goes to the website of apartmenttherapy. On this site, one can get information of how to tell a good bell jar from the bad ones and the price range of bell jars.
Take an electric bell and hang this bell inside an empty bell-jar fitted with a vacuum pump (as shown in the following figure). Initially, one can hear the sound of the ringing bell. Now, pump out some air from the bell-jar using the vacuum pump. It will be observed that the sound of the ringing bell decreases. If one keeps on pumping the air out of the bell-jar, then at one point, the glass-jar will be devoid of any air. At this moment, no sound can be heard from the ringing bell although one can see that the prong of the bell is still vibrating. When there is no air present inside, we can say that a vacuum is produced. Sound cannot travel through vacuum. This shows that sound needs a material medium for its propagation.
I have one of these Liberty Bell shaped Jars. Feel free to email me at pipespalm@aol.com
A hard copy would be best.
It is not Anubis on the canopic jar; but a jackal headed son of Horus (one of four) named Duamutefhe protected the stomach and was in turn protected by the goddess Neith.
Creating a model is a good teaching technique. Place one paper clip, one green leaf, and one eggshell in a jar that contains one cup of white vinegar. Place the same materials in a second jar. Fill the second jar with a cup of water. Examine the materials in both jars the next day.
Every jar represents it's own protector. One god for the lungs, another for the stomach, another for the intestine and another for...[i don't remember the last one]
78
The jars are called canopy jars and each one were charged with safekeeping a particular human organ (or organs). Duamutef - the jackal-headed god protected the stomach in his jar. Qebehsenuaf - the falcon-headed god protected the intestines in his jar. Hapi - the baboon-headed god protected the lungs in his jar. Imseti - the human-headed god protected the liver in his jar.