the muscles and the bone work together and attached
Skeletal muscles rely on contractions to move the bone they are attached to so it is contract and relax
The biceps - any muscle attached to the skeleton.
There are two ends of attachment of skeletal muscle. The "origin", and the "insertion". The "insertion" end refers to the end which is attached to a moveable bone which this muscle will move when it is contracted. The "origin" end is usually the most distal attachment (in appendicular skeleton) this is the bone that the muscle attaches to, and DOES NOT MOVE. Example. Biceps brachii. Origin- connection to the humeral head Insertion- radius/ulna summary- contract your biceps muscle, and your radius and ulna will move. not your shoulder. The end.
To help you move, skeletal muscle is attached to
the connection between the two is like this. the nervous system sends the signal to the skeletal muscle to contract. This contraction causes the muscle to pull the bone, and the bone bends. This would mean that the movement of the skeleton is caused by nervous system which triggers the skeletal muscle to move the skeleton.
Tendons are type of dense regular connective tissue that is continuous with the fascia associated with muscle tissue (endomysium, perimysium, and epimysium) that connects the skeletal muscle to bone.
Helps your body move and is made of:Ligaments: elastic bands that keep joints togetherTendons: Connect muscle to BoneJoints: Connects Bone to Bone
To move a voluntary muscle, you just want to do it. When you want to walk, the nervous system sends a signal to the brain and the skeletal muscle to move your legs. So you are making your leg move by voluntary muscle, which is skeletal muscle.
You cant live without the skeletal muscle because the skeletal muscle helps with your joints not to move in an uncomfortable position and the skeletal muscle it was keep the bones from breaking to easily.
Skeletal muscles move bones. A pair of muscles is required to move a bone -- one muscle to straighten the joint, and another to bend the joint.
an origin is where the muscle attaches to the bone, it also attaches on another bone, this is called the insertion, the attachment where the bone moves is the insertion, the attachment where the bone does not move is the origin.