When our bodies get heated, we sweat, and when we sweat, our skin absorbs the moisture and cools us off again.
Because a humans average body temperature is around 98.6 degrees and when we breathe when its cold outside the heat that comes out attaches or forms around the colder air and condenses into a vapor.
it is physically possible for humans to live in the wetlands, although, because of the moist environment, many humans choose not to. there are many alligators and swamp-animals which are not friendly toward humans, so you wont find humans living there.
The movement of humans into a population is called migration.
chamara silva
in the scope of geologic time, how significant is the presence of humans?
Yes. Being warm blooded mammals, not cold-blooded reptiles, platypuses do maintain a constant body temperature.
sweat is used to cool down the body
For humans (and mammals in general) it often means death due to hyperthermia, but for reptiles that's normal.
I believe snakes and frogs can do that.....
It is called homeostasis (internal environment maintained at a constant level) or thermostasis (internal heat maintained at a constant temperature). The overall name for the processes by which temperature is controlled is thermoregulation.
In humans, the maintenance of a stable internal temperature is primarily a result of thermoregulation, which is controlled by the hypothalamus in the brain. It integrates signals from the body's temperature sensors and initiates responses such as sweating, shivering, and altering blood flow to the skin to maintain homeostasis. This process ensures that the body's core temperature remains within a narrow range, critical for optimal physiological functioning.
98.6 Fahrenheit or 37 Celsius is the normal temperature for humans.
Humans are ENDOtherms, NOT ectotherms. Endotherms include birds, mammals, and of course, humans. We maintain homeostasis [internal constancy] in all climates or temperatures. We are warm-blooded, but, unlike ectotherms, which lack internal temperature-regulating mechanisms and have to GO somewhere to either gain or lose heat, such as amphibians, for example, we humans, no matter the external temperature, maintain our constant [98.6] body temperature: we sweat when we're too hot so as to cool down. Behaviorally, we move to a cooler climate. When we're too cold, we usually shiver, which increases body heat. "Goosebumps" are another way the body attempts to hold in warmth, occurring when muscles contract.
An organism maintains a stable internal temperature through a process called thermoregulation. This process involves mechanisms such as sweating or shivering to adjust body temperature in response to external conditions. For example, in humans, sweating helps to cool the body down when it gets too hot, while shivering generates heat to warm the body up when it is cold.
The human body generates heat as part of its normal functioning, and needs to maintain a constant internal temperature of around 98.6 degrees Fahrenheit. When it's 100 degrees outside, the body has to work extra hard to dissipate the extra heat and keep its internal temperature stable, which can make it feel hot for humans.
False
no they do not without medication. sweating is natural.