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Tuesday, March 17, 2015

Turtle Diagram


Images gallery of turtle diagram





elsmar


elsmar





Super Turtle Process Diagram


Super Turtle Process Diagram


Super Turtle Process Diagram Audit number & date: Auditors: Process/Activity: Process Owner: Barish Consulting



Auditors Turtle Diagrams Waste Quality Digest


Auditors Turtle Diagrams  Waste Quality Digest


Less is more In the past several months, registrar auditors strongly recommended to three former or current clients that they develop and install turtle diagrams for



elsmar


elsmar





SpreadsheetZONE Free Excel Template Repository


SpreadsheetZONE Free Excel Template Repository


Turtle Diagram. Provided by Pagos. Downloads: 8588: Rating: (3.3 out of 5) Live-Preview: SpreadsheetWEB. Template: Download: Share | in Share: Language : English.



Quality Digest Magazine


Quality Digest Magazine


This is a good analogy because the turtle diagram looks at how the process satisfies the customer (typically an internal customer at this stage).



Turtle Diagram Template ChartitNOW


Turtle Diagram Template ChartitNOW


The “Turtle Diagram Template Package” delivers professionally produced, ready to use templates in a production or office environment.



Sea Turtle PrintoutEnchantedLearning


Sea Turtle PrintoutEnchantedLearning


Sea Turtle Printout: Sea Turtles are large turtles that spend most of their lives in the seas. They live in shallow coastal waters of warm and temperate seas .



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CIRCULATORY SYSTEM

The circulatory system is centred on the HEART, a muscular organ that rhythmically pumps BLOOD around a complex network of BLOOD VESSELS extending to every part of the body. Blood carries the oxygen and nutrients needed to fuel the activities of the body’s tissues and organs, and it plays a vital role in removing the body’s waste products. An average-sized adult carries about 5 litres (9 pints) of blood.

PARTS OF THE SYSTEM

All the output of blood from the left side of the heart goes into the aorta, the body’s largest artery. Other arteries branch from the aorta to supply blood to the head, limbs, and internal organs. The blood is drained from all these parts by veins into two large vessels, the inferior and superior venae cava, which deliver the blood back to the right side of the heart.

HEART

The heart contracts tirelessly – more than 2.5 billion times over an average lifetime – to pump blood around the body. These contractions are triggered by electrical impulses that originate in a specialized area of heart tissue. The signals spread through the muscle in the wall of the heart via a network of conducting fibres.

INSIDE THE HEART

The heart has two upper chambers, called atria, and two lower chambers, called ventricles. Blood from the body arrives in the right atrium. This blood is low in oxygen, and is shown here in blue. The blood passes to the right ventricle, which pumps it to the lungs to pick up more oxygen. The left atrium receives oxygen-rich blood (red) back from the lungs. This passes to the left ventricle, which pumps it by way of the aorta to the body.

HEART VALVES

At the exit of each heart chamber lies a valve, which ensures the one-way flow of blood through the heart and into the circulation. These valves are made of flaps that open to allow blood to pass through but snap tightly shut to prevent backflow. The valves have three flaps, except for the valve between the left atrium and left ventricle, which has two.

BLOOD VESSELS

If an adult’s blood vessels were laid end to end, they would stretch out over 100,000 km (62,500 miles). There are three main types of vessel. Arteries carry blood from the heart to the body’s tissues, while veins carry blood back from the tissues to the heart. Small arteries are called arterioles and small veins are referred to as venules. The third and smallest type of vessel, capillaries, form a network connecting the smallest arterioles with the smallest venules.

TYPES OF BLOOD VESSEL

Arteries have relatively thick elastic walls that enable them to withstand the high pressure of blood pumped from the heart. By the time the blood has been forced through capillaries and arrived in veins, its pressure has dropped, so veins have thinner walls.

BLOOD

Blood is composed of a straw-coloured fluid, plasma, and huge numbers of blood cells that float in the plasma. Of the two main types of blood cell, red blood cells carry oxygen to the body’s tissues, and white blood cells help defend the body against infection. Blood also transports nutrients, proteins needed for blood clotting, and waste products.

BLOOD CLOTTING

If a blood vessel is damaged, a clot forms to stop blood leaking. First, platelets stick together to form a plug that stops the leak. At the same time, a complex sequence of chemical events in the blood leads to the production of long strands of a protein called fibrin. These bind the blood cells and debris together to form a gel-like clot that gradually solidifies. The solid clot remains until the blood vessel has been repaired.

BLOOD CELLS

A drop of blood contains millions of red cells, and each cell contains 250 million molecules of a substance called haemoglobin. In the lungs, oxygen binds to haemoglobin, but in the tissues the oxygen is released again. Several types of white blood cell exist, and all are important to the body’s immune system. Platelets are tiny cells that are needed for blood clotting.
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Asthma Disease Diagram

Asthma Disease Diagram

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Human kidney blood circulation diagram

Human kidney blood circulation

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Zebras and Oxpeckers Work Together

"We are all dependent on one another, every soul of us on earth."
~ George Bernard Shaw

When Shaw wrote the above he probably wasnt thinking about zebras and oxpeckers. But these creatures from the animal kingdom illustrate his quote perfectly. Oxpeckers dine off the lice and ticks they find on zebras. They also use the animals soft hair to line their nests. Besides getting harmful parasites off their backs, zebras benefit when oxpeckers alert them to danger, calling out and flying away whenever they spot predators, such as hungry lions lurking in the high savanna grass. This gives the zebra herd time to escape.

Zebras and Oxpeckers Work Together is part of a series featuring animal symbiosis. The text, written on a Grade 1 level, introduces the concept clearly and concretely. The vivid photographs are well-chosen--the one of a herd running from a lion is full of drama--and help beginning readers understand the relationship between bird and grazer. A glossary defines words specific to the subject, such as parasite, savanna, and symbiosis, and there is a listing of books and internet sites for more information. Additional animal pairs in the series are ants and aphids; clown fish and sea anemones; and moray eels and cleaner fish. All in all, a welcome series for young animal-loving science enthusiasts.

Zebras and Oxpeckers Work Together
by Martha E.H. Rustard
Capstone Press, 24 pages
Published: 2011  

This weeks Nonfiction Monday is being held at Rasco From RIF.
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