The Complete Human Body 2nd Edition PDF Download Free

The Complete Human Body 2nd Edition PDF

Features of The Complete Human Body 2nd Edition PDF

The Complete Human Body 2nd Edition PDF-Intricate details of all aspects of the human body down to the smallest detail – from our cells and DNA to the largest bone in our bodies, the femur.

3D generated illustrations and medical imaging provide a close look at the body’s forms and functions in physiology and anatomy, showing how the body works and its amazing systems and abilities.

To understand our modern human bodies, this book first looks at our ancestors and how the evolution of Homo Sapiens shaped our anatomy. This gave us the ability to walk tall, create language, and make tools with our incredibly adapted opposable thumbs.

Learn how we can see evolution in our DNA, and the functions of DNA. Read about the things you can only see with microscopes and other special imaging machines, like cell structure, motor pathways in the brain, and the inner iris.

All these many parts work together to make the human body. The physiology of our body is written in clarifying detail. Learn about the organs and systems that operate within, like the cardiovascular, digestive, and neural systems.

See our elegant anatomy and read how the skeleton, muscles, and ligaments operate to allow movement. This second edition has included more detail on the joints in the hands and feet. The Complete Human Body takes you from infancy to old age showing how our body grows and changes, and what can go wrong.

2nd Edition: Enhanced and Updated

This visual guide uses remarkable illustrations and diagrams to peek inside our complex and astounding bodies. It has been written in an easy-to-follow format, with straightforward explanations to give you the best overview of the many things that make us human. Suitable for young students who want an extra resource for school, people working in medical fields, or for anyone with a keen interest in human biology.

Inside the body of the book:

• The Integrated Body
• Anatomy
• How the Body Works
• Life Cycles
• Diseases and Disorders

Recommended Books For You

The Real Anthony Fauci Bill Gates Big Pharma and the Global War on Democracy and Public Health PDF The Real Anthony Fauci Bill Gates Big Pharma and the Global War on Democracy and Public Health PDF Free Download

What Happened to You? PDF What Happened to You By Oprah Winfrey PDF Download Free

Description of The Complete Human Body 2nd Edition PDF

The Complete Human Body 2nd Edition PDF is one of the best-known books on the subject of basic medical sciences. This book covers all the cases and phenomenons a student and professional doctor might be up against in their whole life. Master this book and you will be of prime help in solving cases of diseases that are difficult to treat. Make a difference. Download Now.

The Authors

The Complete Human Body 2nd Edition PDF

Alice May Roberts FRSB (born 19 May 1973)[2] is an English biological anthropologist, biologist, television presenter and author. Since 2012 she has been Professor of the Public Engagement in Science at the University of Birmingham. Since 2019, she has been President of the charity Humanists UK, which campaigns for state secularism and for “a tolerant world where rational thinking and kindness prevail”.
Early life and education
Roberts was born in Bristol in 1973,[3] the daughter of an aeronautical engineer and an English and arts teacher.[4] She grew up in the Bristol suburb of Westbury-on-Trym where she attended The Red Maids’ School.[3][5][6] In December 1988, she won the BBC1 Blue Peter Young Artists competition, appearing with her picture and the presenters on the front cover of the 10 December 1988 edition of the Radio Times.[7]

Roberts studied medicine at the University of Wales College of Medicine (now part of Cardiff University) and graduated in 1997 with a Bachelor of Medicine, Bachelor of Surgery (MB BCh) degree, having gained an intercalated Bachelor of Science degree in Anatomy
After graduating, Roberts worked as a junior doctor with the National Health Service in South Wales for eighteen months. In 1998 she left clinical medicine and worked as an anatomy demonstrator at the University of Bristol, becoming a lecturer there in 1999.[3][5][10]

She spent seven years working part-time on her PhD in paleopathology, the study of disease in ancient human remains, receiving the degree in 2008.[3][5][11] She was a senior teaching fellow at the University of Bristol Centre for Comparative and Clinical Anatomy, where her main roles were teaching clinical anatomy, embryology and physical anthropology, as well as researching osteoarchaeology and paleopathology.[5][8][12] She stated in 2009 that she was working towards becoming a professor of anatomy.[13]

In 2009 she co-presented modules for the Beating Bipolar programme, the first internet-based education treatment for patients with bipolar depression, trialled by Cardiff University researchers.[14]

From August 2009 until January 2012, Roberts was a visiting fellow in both the Department of Archaeology and Anthropology and the Department of Anatomy of the University of Bristol.[8][15][16] From 2009 to 2016 Roberts was Director of Anatomy at the NHS Severn Deanery School of Surgery[9] and also an honorary fellow at Hull York Medical School.[17][18]

In February 2012 Roberts was appointed the University of Birmingham’s first professor of public engagement in science.[19][20][21]

Roberts has been a member of the advisory board of Cheltenham Science Festival for ten years and a member of the Advisory Board of the Milner Centre for Evolution at the University of Bath since 2018.[22]

Writing in the i newspaper in 2016, Roberts dismissed the aquatic ape hypothesis (AAH) as a distraction “from the emerging story of human evolution that is more interesting and complex”, adding that AAH has become “a theory of everything” that is simultaneously “too extravagant and too simple”. She concluded by saying that “science is about evidence, not wishful thinking”.[23][24]

Roberts and Aoife McLysaght co-presented the 2018 Christmas Lectures at the Royal Institution in London.[22][25] She is president of the British Science Association; her term started in September 2019.[26]

In January 2021 Roberts presented a ten-part narrative history series about the human body entitled Bodies on BBC Radio 4.[27]

Television career
A presenter of science and history television documentaries, Roberts was one of the regular co-presenters of BBC geographical and environmental series Coast.[28]

Roberts first appeared on television in the Time Team Live 2001 episode,[29][30] working on Anglo-Saxon burials at Breamore, Hampshire. She served as a bone specialist and general presenter in many episodes, including the spin-off series Extreme Archaeology. In August 2006, a Time Team special episode Big Royal Dig investigated the archaeology of Britain’s royal palaces and Roberts was one of the main presenters.

Roberts wrote and presented a BBC Two series on anatomy and health entitled Dr Alice Roberts: Don’t Die Young, which was broadcast from January 2007.[31] She presented a five-part series on human evolution and early human migrations for the channel entitled The Incredible Human Journey, beginning on 10 May 2009.[32] In September 2009, she co-presented (with Mark Hamilton) A Necessary Evil?, a one-hour documentary about the Burke and Hare murders.[33]

In August 2010, she presented a one-hour documentary on BBC Four, Wild Swimming, inspired by Roger Deakin’s book Waterlog.[34] Roberts presented a four-part BBC Two series on archaeology in August–September 2010, Digging for Britain.[35][36] Roberts explained, “We’re taking a fresh approach by showing British archaeology as it’s happening out in the field, from the excitement of artefacts as they come out of the ground, through to analysing them in the lab and working out what they tell us about human history.”[37] The series returned in 2011 and again (on BBC Four) in 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2020 and 2022.[38]

In March 2011, she presented a BBC documentary in the Horizon series entitled Are We Still Evolving?[39] She presented the series Origins of Us, which aired on BBC Two in October 2011, examining how the human body has adapted through seven million years of evolution.[40] The last part of this series featured Roberts visiting the Rift Valley in East Africa.

In April 2012, Roberts presented Woolly Mammoth: Secrets from the Ice on BBC Two.[41] From 22 to 24 October 2012, she appeared, with co-presenter Dr George McGavin, in the BBC series Prehistoric Autopsy,[42] which discussed the remains of early hominins such as Neanderthals, Homo erectus and Australopithecus afarensis. In May and June 2013 she presented the BBC Two series Ice Age Giants.[43] In September 2014, she was a presenter on the Horizon programme Is Your Brain Male or Female?[44]

In October 2014, she presented Spider House.[45] In 2015, she co-presented a 3-part BBC TV documentary with Neil Oliver entitled The Celts: Blood, Iron and Sacrifice[46] and wrote a book to tie in with the series: The Celts: Search for a Civilisation.[47] In April–May 2016, she co-presented the BBC Two programme Food Detectives which looked at food nutrition and its effects on the body. In August 2016, she presented the BBC Four documentary, Britain’s Pompeii: A Village Lost in Time, which explored the Must Farm Bronze Age settlement in Cambridgeshire.[48] In May 2017, she was a presenter of the BBC Two documentary The Day The Dinosaurs Died.[49] In April 2018, she presented the six-part Channel 4 series Britain’s Most Historic Towns,[50] which examines the history of British towns, which was followed by a second series in May 2019 and a third series in November 2020.

In September 2018, she presented the BBC Two documentary King Arthur’s Britain: The Truth Unearthed, which examines new archaeological discoveries that cast light on the political and trading situation in Britain during the Early Middle Ages.[51] In December 2018, she presented a series of three Royal Institution Christmas Lectures, titled Who am I? and broadcast on BBC Four, with guest lecturer Aoife McLysaght.[25]

On 4 August 2020, Roberts was the guest on BBC Radio 4’s The Life Scientific.[52]

Aired as a three part series in September 2020, Roberts co-presented the BBC’s “The Big Dig” focusing on the finds at Saint James’s Park in London and Park Street in Birmingham.

On 12 February 2021, Roberts presented a one-hour BBC Two documentary, Stonehenge: The Lost Circle Revealed,[53] about Mike Parker Pearson’s five-year-long quest that filled in a 400-year historical gap in the provenance of the bluestones of Stonehenge and Waun Mawn.[54][55][56]

Awards and honours
In 2011, Roberts was elected an honorary fellow of the British Science Association,[20] and a fellow of the Royal Society of Biology.[57] In 2014, she was selected by the Science Council as one of their leading UK practising scientists exemplars.[58] During 2014, she was President of The Association for Science Education,[58] and presented the Morgan-Botti lecture.[59]

She has received honorary doctorates (DSc) from Royal Holloway, University of London; Bournemouth University;[57] the Open University and the University of Leeds;[60] and honorary Doctor of Medicine (MD) from the University of Sussex.[61]

In 2019 She was awarded an Honorary Fellowship by Cardiff University.[62]

Roberts was awarded British Humanist of the Year 2015, for work promoting the teaching of evolution in schools.[63]

The Incredible Unlikeliness of Being was shortlisted for the Wellcome Book Prize 2015.[64]

In 2020, Roberts won the Royal Society David Attenborough Award and Lecture.[65]

Personal life
Roberts lives with her husband, David Stevens, and two children, a daughter born in 2010 and a son born in 2013.[66] She met her husband in Cardiff in 1997 when she was a medical student and he was an archaeology student.[3] She is a pescatarian,[67] an atheist[68] and president of Humanists UK, beginning her three-year term in January 2019.[69][26] Her children were assigned a faith school due to over-subscription of her local community schools; she campaigns against state-funded religious schools, citing her story as an example of the problems perpetuated by faith schools.[70]

Roberts enjoys watercolour painting, surfing, wild swimming, cycling, gardening and pub quizzes.[3] Roberts is an organiser of the Cheltenham Science Festival and school outreach programmes within the University of Bristol’s Medical Sciences Division.[5] In March 2007, she hosted the Bristol Medical School’s charity dance show Clicendales 2007, to raise funds for the charity CLIC Sargent.[71]

Roberts took her baby daughter with her when touring for the six-month filming of the first series of Digging for Britain in 2010.[37]

Publications
Roberts is an author.[72][73][74] She has authored or co-authored a number of peer reviewed scientific articles in journals.[1][75][76][77][78] Her published books include:

Proceedings of the 6th Annual Conference of the British Association for Biological Anthropology and Osteoarchaeology. Archaeopress. 2007. International Standard Book Number 978-1-4073-0035-1. OCLC 124507736.[79]
Don’t Die Young: An Anatomist’s Guide to Your Organs and Your Health. Bloomsbury Publishing. 2007. International Standard Book Number 978-0-7475-9025-5. OCLC 81195249.[31]
The Incredible Human Journey. Bloomsbury Publishing. 2009. International Standard Book Number 978-0-7475-9839-8. OCLC 646959203.
The Complete Human Body. Dorling Kindersley. 2010. International Standard Book Number 978-1-4053-4749-5. OCLC 951155923.
Evolution The Human Story. Dorling Kindersley. 2011. International Standard Book Number 978-1-4053-6165-1. OCLC 1038452947. Revised edition (2018), Dorling Kindersley, International Standard Book Number 978-1-4654-7401-8
Human anatomy : the definitive visual guide, London : Dorling Kindersley, 2014. International Standard Book Number 9780241292082, OCLC 1010946584
The Incredible Unlikeliness of Being: Evolution and the Making of Us. Heron Books. 2014. International Standard Book Number 978-1-8486-6477-7. OCLC 910702281.
The Celts: Search for a Civilisation. Heron Books. 2015. International Standard Book Number 978-1784293321. OCLC 967497115.
Tamed: Ten Species that Changed our World. Hutchinson Books. 2017. International Standard Book Number 978-1786330611. OCLC 1038452971.
Copson, Andrew; Roberts, Alice (2020). The Little Book of Humanism: Universal lessons on finding purpose, meaning and joy. Little, Brown Book Group. International Standard Book Number 978-0349425467.
Roberts, Alice (2021). Ancestors : a history of Britain in seven burials. Simon & Schuster. International Standard Book Number 978-1471188015.

Dimensions and Characteristics of The Complete Human Body 2nd Edition PDF

  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ DK; 2nd edition (June 7, 2016)
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Hardcover ‏ : ‎ 528 pages
  • International Standard Book Number-10 ‏ : ‎ 1465449183
  • International Standard Book Number-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-1465449184
  • Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 6.06 pounds
  • Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 10.25 x 1.45 x 12.13 inches
  • Book Name : The Complete Human Body 2nd Edition PDF

Download Link 1

Top reviews

Sarvajit “I am someone with amateur interest in human body and wanted a book that goes into some detail but not too much detail. This book tries to be between an actual text and encyclopedia but for some reason I feel its fails to be either. The book goes into great detail when explaining Anatomy (every bone and muscle is named) but not so much in Physiology (how things work). The author seems to have taken the liberty to suddenly go to the last level of detail, explain in a few sentences and stop abruptly and suddenly zoom out to a higher level explain in few sentences and move on.

Human anatomy forms a big chunk of the book but that is just various parts named with a one or two line explanation. (eg. this is part foo. It touches into bar and helps in baz). This makes it a great reference for students of medicine/ doctors/nurses who want to revise or explain things to their patients. But for an amateur trying to get a better idea of what happens internally I feel it falls short. I feel the depth of anatomy and physiology must be in tune. This book goes down to 100% of anatomy but physiology wavers from 5% to 20% but not more. Neat diagrams aren’t everything. They must tie together to form a big picture which this book fails to.”

Sydney Acres “I’m getting old, and with that comes a lot of postural, muscular, and neurological issues. I’ve been going to a massage therapist for about 15 years, who has kept me walking comfortably. I recently had to be referred to a wonderful physical therapist. At one point in my therapy she pulled out this book, and I commented on how nicely illustrated and organized it was. She said that a friend of hers had given it to her when she got her doctorate in PT, and it was her absolute favorite reference.

Well, I recently found out that my massage therapist was about to have her 40th birthday, and this book came to mind as a great present. I checked her shelves to make sure that she didn’t already have it, and surprised her with the gift at my appointment 2 days before her birthday. She loves it.

I was concerned about ordering it because so many of the past reviews had said that the book arrived damaged. In my case, it had some air cushions (those air-filled plastic tiny packing pillows) in the box to keep the book from rattling around in the box, and it arrived in perfect condition.”

Cynthia Gomez “Bought book for my medical coding courses. As I flipped the pages I was in awe as how the anatomy of the body is. This book is big, heavy, the graphics are amazing, in love with this book! You will enjoy reading how the human body mechanism works. You will not be disappointed. The only thing is that the book is heavy!”
R.. Severin “This book is a complete of resource with large sections on anatomy with large full 2-page illustrations, a section on how the body works, another section on the whole life cycle, and finishing with a section on diseases and disorders. Each section has numerous colorful illustrations and photos. The text is written so a lay person can understand it but also includes the terms that medical professionals might use. I like the size of the illustrations and the detail in identifying all the parts. The book is large – 10” by 12″. The paper used is very high quality. My only negative comment is that the book is very heavy weighing in at over 5 lbs.”
Yehuda Kashanian “I am currently applying to occupational therapy school and this has to be the best designing book I have ever seen for anatomy and physiology. It goes in depth of everything in the human body and add some context to what you need to study, it is really good if you are specified in a specific area of the human body. The quality of information is outstanding and if I was a professor I would use this book for anatomy and physiology classes.”
Linda C. Taylor “Very comprehensive anatomy book. As an RN, I highly recommend this book. Straight forth, not too medical. But, not talking down to anyone either. Since I hadn’t practiced nursing in over 10 years, I donated all my nursing books to a local school, thinking I could look up anything I wanted to on the internet. However, I find myself going to this book more and more to explain things to my husband and to refresh my memory. As they say A Picture Is Worth A Thousand Words.”

 

The Complete Human Body 2nd Edition PDF

Reference: Wikipedia

The Complete Human Body 2nd Edition PDF

Disclaimer:
This site complies with DMCA Digital Copyright Laws. Please bear in mind that we do not own copyrights to this book/software. We’re sharing this with our audience ONLY for educational purposes and we highly encourage our visitors to purchase the original licensed software/Books. If someone with copyrights wants us to remove this software/Book, please contact us
. immediately.

You may send an email to emperor_hammad@yahoo.com for all DMCA / Removal Requests.

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here