1) It's not the lungs. It's the haemoglobin in blood cells that allow blood cells to carry oxygen to where it is needed.
2) Lungs can absorb a large amount of oxygen because of alveoli. There are small tubes in lungs which have alveoli at there ends. The alveoli are surrounded by a network of capillaries. At these capillaries is where the blood picks up its cargo of oxygen from the air.
Oh and it is hemoglobin not haemoglobin okay Soggy2002!
I happen to be from England, the birthplace of the English language, where we spell it 'haemoglobin'. Okay, MsMM1987?
Air moves from the trachea to the bronchi the passage that direct air into the lungs
They absorb so much oxygen because of the Alveoli. An Alveoli are the endings of small tubes that are located in your lungs and transfer oxygen to your capillaries.
No, they have gills.Sharks do not breathe with lungs, but with gills that absorb the oxygen in the water.
The capillaries absorb oxygen at the lungs. This occurs near the alveoli.
ur lungs
the blood absorb oxygen in the lungs(cappilaries)
because your lungs arnt that big
People who live and work on these altiplanos have developed powerful lungs. Their lungs enlarge in order to absorb the small amount of oxygen available at the high altitudes. HOPE THIS HELPS YOU MY FRIENDS PLZ GIVE ME A GOOD REPORT😜
your lungs
Hemoglobin, a protein found in red blood cells, helps to absorb and transport oxygen throughout the body. Hemoglobin binds to oxygen in the lungs and releases it to tissues that need oxygen for energy production.
Because lungs are not adapted to absorb oxygen from the water.
Hemoglobin is a protein in red blood cells that can absorb oxygen. It binds to oxygen in the lungs, carries it through the bloodstream, and releases it to cells throughout the body.
They absorb the oxygen from the lungs and carry it until it is used.