The tongue
Fixed point at the end of the muscle is called as 'Insertion of the muscle.'
A muscle attached at only one end is called unipennate muscle. It has a single tendon and its muscle fibers run diagonally to the tendon.
The Tongue
Cardiac muscle cells are linked together by intercalating discs that help to conduct the electrical impulse that makes them all beat together.
In order to work, a skeletal muscle must have both ends connected to he skeleton. The end of a muscle that does not move is called its origin. The other end is attached to the bone it moves, and is called insertion.
The root of each hair follicle is connected to the small arrector pili muscles are small muscles attached to hair follicles in mammals. Each arrector pili muscle has a bundle of smooth muscle fibers which attach to the follicular units which have nerves.
In order to work, a skeletal muscle must have both ends connected to he skeleton. The end of a muscle that does not move is called its origin. The other end is attached to the bone it moves, and is called insertion.
The tongue, there is also suppose to be another tiny one but I cannot remember it.
Yes. The tongue is the only muscle in the entire human body that is only attached on one extremity. In that sense the tongue is more like a tentacle than a muscle...
No, there were no mammals at that time. Small mammals only came into being, during the end of the dinosaur period. Humans evolved fron these small mammals.
Both ends of the battery are connected, to make a complete circuit.
Muscle fibres are connected to neurones on either a 1:1 ratio (such as fingers, where precise muscle control is needed) whereas some muscle fibres are connected to neurones in a 1 neurone:several muscle fibres ratio. The second occurs where precise movement is not needed, such as the calf muscle, where a stimulus needs to cause a large and synchronised contraction of muscles as opposed to precise contraction of certain individual fibres.