deepest cellular layer of the epidermis
No. They are found in the lowest layer of the epidermis (stratum basale)No. They are found in the lowest layer of the epidermis (stratum basale).
1st is epidermis, 2nd is subcutaneous and last, the dermis, which is the deepest layer
The stratum basale and the stratum corneum are two of the layers of the epidermis. The epidermis is the outermost layer of your skin. Within the epidermis, the stratum basale is deeper than the stratum corneum, which is the most superficial layer of the epidermis.
In germinative layer: the stratum basale and stratum spinosum of the epidermis considered as a single layer; the term is sometimes used to denote only the stratum basale.
No. The Stratum Granulosum is deteriorating organelles. The Stratum Basale, or Stratum Germinativum, is the "Germinating layer". The most rapid cell division occurs here, of course, because it's closest to the vascular dermis.
stratum basale
We find it in the deepest layer of the epidermis called Stratum Basal in which the stem cells undergo Mitosis replacing keratinocytes lost at the stratum corneum, the apical surface of epidermis.
Cell division occurs in the stratum basale of the epidermis. The epidermis is made up of 5 layers. From outer to inner these layers are: stratum corneum, stratum licidum, stratum granulosum, stratum spinosum, and stratum basale. The basale is the innermost layer of the epidermis and is where cell division occurs.
Stratum granulosum
Stratum Basale
stratum basale.
The epidermal layer. (below that is the acellular dermal layer)