In one week, the entire human population sheds enough skin cells to amount to a pile three stories high.
1.5lbs of skin in one year. By the age of 70, an average person will have lost 105 lbs of skin
Yes. A person who is technically dead as the heart has stopped can be returned to life by use of a defibrillator in some situations.
A scale, versus a feather.
This is because being dead is defined as stoppage in the functioning of brain and it is not having any relation with the functioning of heart. If the heart stops beating then there is no supply of oxygen rich blood to the brain and hence the brain dies and henceforth the person is declared dead.
Organic matter transformates into humus. For more information on this process, check this link: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Humus
Once a person is dead, they are beyond the help of human prayers, and it's up to God to decide their fate; heaven or hell. When a person is alive, humans prayers on their behalf might help them, but, once they are dead, Luther felt they were beyond the help of human prayers and it was entirely up to God to decide their ultimate fate.
dead cells
dead skin cells come off your skin VERYY often u lose over millions of dead skin cells a day!
Stratum cornelum and or stratum licidumThe skin cell.
how do you make a dead person alive with your hands
no
Dead skin cells break away from the epidermis and they fall off. This makes room for the newer skin cells. The dead cells fall off as you go about your daily life and they can end up in your bed and around your house.
Dead people can never be brought back
Robert Hooke was the person who invented the microscope and first observed the cells in a cork.
Robert Hooke was the first person to discover cells, but what he was observing was a dead plant cell. The first person who observed living cells was Leeuwenhoek.
Generally Human Cheek cells (as with skin cells) are dead on the outermost layers, and still alive on the deeper layers. So the cheek cells are dead even before you take them out of your mouth.
white blood cells when dead come together
The average weight of cremated human remains, also known as ashes or cremains, is around 5-7 pounds for an adult. This weight can vary depending on factors such as the person's size and bone density.