There appears to be great debate on which muscle in the human body is the strongest. According to the The Library of Congress, "Everyday Mysteries," there is no one answer for this question since there are different ways to measure strength. There is absolute strength (maximum force), dynamic strength (repeated motions), elastic strength (exert force quickly), and strength endurance (withstand fatigue).
However, click on the related links section (Everyday Mysteries) indicated below for a better understanding of the debate.
Because the leg bones have to support your entire body, where as arm bones only have to support the weight of your arms
the leg bone are longer than the arm bones because our legs need to be long but not migjets but normal people need there legs to long enough
yes
No.
There are 32 bones in one human's arm...
Upper arm = Humerus Lower arm = Ulna and Radius
The radius is one of the bones of the human arm.
The bones in the lower arm are called radius and ulna.
There is only one bone in the upper arm - the humerus.
No.
There are three arm bones, the Ulna, the Radius and the Humerus.
You do physical work with your right limb. So you do more exercise by your right arm. So your the right arm or limb becomes stronger than left.
There are 3 bones in the arm. The forearm has 2 bones, the radius and ulna. The upper arm has one bone, the humerus.
Arm bones of all mammals . APEX=A bird's wing bone
Yes. My older sister broke her arm when she was about 2 (i think? i wasn't born until she was 7). Her arm was broken in 6 places and never healed to become a normal human arm, so she now has 6 extra bones totaling 212 bones. I heard about this story recently and i have also become interested in humans with more than the average amount of bones, but i can't find any results.