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7. our bones grow continuously throughout our lives, with old bone cell…

Question

  1. our bones grow continuously throughout our lives, with old bone cells dying and being discarded. however, for astronauts who are in space for a prolonged period, a lack of gravitational pull—which has a number of beneficial effects on the body, including supporting new bone growth—results in their bones adding less bone tissue to replace dying tissue. in fact, for every month in space, a person will lose 1.5 to 2% of his or her bone mass, with the hip bone and the lower leg bones most affected. it can be inferred from the passage that: a. astronauts rarely regain their lost bone mass b. bone loss is not a problem for non - astronauts c. the lower body typically experiences more bone growth than the upper body d. astronauts seldom stay in space for more than a month

Explanation:

Brief Explanations

The passage mentions that for astronauts in space, lack of gravitational pull affects new bone growth and they lose bone mass, especially in hip and lower - leg bones. This implies that the lower body is more affected by bone - loss due to space conditions, which also suggests that under normal conditions (with gravitational pull), the lower body may have more bone growth compared to the upper body. Option A is not mentioned about regaining bone mass; option B is wrong as the passage only focuses on astronauts and doesn't say bone loss isn't a problem for non - astronauts; option D has no basis as there is no information about how long astronauts stay in space.

Answer:

C. the lower body typically experiences more bone growth than the upper body