It all depends, its actually an interesting question. if you notice, you find sweat more on your forehead and armpits than your arms or hands. It all depends on a whole list of factors that I cannot give you because you will die or boredom.
Probably that is axilla. You have special kind of sweat glands there called as apocrine glands. There secretion has secondary sex character.
palm and hand
I believe that it is your armpits.....
Plantar
The palms have more sweat glands. It contains about 600 glands per cm2
the fluid secreted by the sweat glands is called
Sweat is secreted through pores in the skin.
Sweat glands
Both endocrine and apocrine sweat glands are found in the armpit. Apocrine sweat glands are found almost everywhere, while endocrine glands are found in the genetial region and the auxillary region.
The palms have more sweat glands. It contains about 600 glands per cm2
scalp
There are very fine and coiled tubular glands in the skin. They are called as sweat glands. In hot and humid tropical climate, the person can produce sweat at the rate of one litre per hour.
Sweat glands are found in the skin.
the sweat glands of the skin rid of sweat as waste product 2nd answer: The sweat glands excrete water onto the skin to help keep you cool.
The palm of your hand. Hands contact more objects and there is also more friction so they need more sweat glands to help cool them.
Both the blood vessels and the sweat glands of the skin work to decrease body temperature when it is too high. The superficial blood vessels dilate to release more heat through the skin, and the sweat glands produce perspiration, which evaporates to reduce body temperature.
Sweat glands do exist. They are the parts of the skin that make perspiration.
The skin.
Sudiforus (sweat) glands.
The skin has more the 4 million pores. On another note, a section of skin about the size of a quarter has more that 600 sweat glands. Esthetician
Sweat glands belong in your skin. In one square inch of skin their are 500 sweat glands. The main jobs of sweat include reducing your body's temperature through evaporation, providing a barrier from harmful bacteria, and keeping your skin from drying out.