Bio-mechanics-applications

Biomechanics is the analysis of how the mechanisms and structures of biological organisms respond to different forces and external stimuli, from the smallest plants to the biggest mammals. Biomechanics in humans also applies to the study of how the skeletal and musculature structures function under different circumstances. More commonly in biomechanics, scientists also seek to implement physics and other methods of mathematically dependent research to explore the boundaries and capacities of biological structures. Biomechanics has, in a sense, been around since the inquiring ancient Greek and Roman minds started to examine animals and vivisect humans to explore our bodies' internal processes. Many of the great thinkers and scientists of our history, from Aristotle, who wrote On the Motion of Animals in the 4th century BC, to Leonardo da Vinci, who researched human muscle and joint function in Italy in the 15th century, tried their hand at some sort of biomechanics.    

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