Because of the connective tissue between your skin and your muscles.
A cow skin gives protection to its body. The cows skin keeps foreign objects away from vital organs, so that it can live.
When you sweat, the moisture on your skin evaporates, taking away heat and cooling your body. This helps to lower your skin and overall body temperature.
The patients body withdraws the blood into the centre of the body for the vital organs - away from the skin - which makes the skin look pale.
Blood is routed away from your skin.
Blood is shunned away from the skin.
to strengthen and reproduce in a process called keratinzation
Blood moves away from the skin and extremities (arms and legs) to push more blood to the core.
The cooling happens due to the sweat evaporating away from the skin.
Perspiration helps to cool the body by evaporating from the skin, which takes away heat and cools the body down.
When you sweat, the moisture on your skin evaporates, taking away heat and cooling your body down.
No, as the skin is attached to the muscles in your body, so you would only have resulted in a bloody circle instead of a separate piece of skin.
When your hypothalamus -- an area of your brain that acts as a thermostat -- senses either a rise or fall in body temperature, it takes action to protect your body. With increases in core body temperature, your hypothalamus directs more of your blood flow to the skin and signals the body to start sweating.