The first molar is usually innervated by two alveolar nerves: the superior alveolar nerves from the maxillary division of the trigeminal nerve.
I believe you are looking for the adductor hallucis which has a transverse and and oblique head.
A scallop shell is often used to pour the water at baptism. The part that is a delicacy to eat is the adductor muscle, that is, the muscle that pulls the two shells closed.
All of them....or do you mean the autonomic nervous system?
It is a set of numbers consisting of all numbers between two end numbers in a continuous domain. The two end numbers may or may not be included.
Scallops have two hinged shells that filter their food from the surrounding water. They have an oversized muscle called the scallop adductor which primarily aids them in swimming short distances.
the adductor
2
Yes, an oyster has a three-chambered heart, consisting of one ventricle and two atria, lying in the pericardical cavity under the adductor muscle.
The hinge ligament hold the two shells together as well as the adductor muscles which controls the opening and closing of the bivalve.
Of the muscles within the hand, the median nerve (C8, T1) commonly supplies two radial lumbricals, opponens pollicis, adductor pollicis brevis and flexor pollicis brevis. These all lie on the radial side. All other muscles of the hand are supplied by the ulnar nerve (C8,T1).
It takes 43 muscles to form a smile, but there are too many nerves involved to provide an exact number. The facial muscles are innervated by the facial nerve (CN VII), which branches out into numerous smaller nerves that control specific movements in the face.