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question2: can you locate cartilage in your ears and nose? how does it feel different than the bones that make up your skeleton?
To answer this, we know from biology (a subfield of Natural Science) that the ears and nose have elastic cartilage. Cartilage in ears/nose is flexible, soft, and bendable (e.g., ears can be folded, nose tip can be pressed). Bones are hard, rigid, and provide structural support (like skull or limb bones, less flexible). By physically touching ears (pinna) and nose (tip) and comparing to bones (e.g., wrist or leg bone), we feel the difference: cartilage is pliable, bones are firm.
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Yes, you can locate cartilage in your ears (the outer ear, or pinna, and the ear canal has cartilage) and in the nose (the nasal septum and the tip of the nose contain cartilage). When you touch the cartilage in your ears or nose, it feels flexible, soft, and bendable (you can gently bend your ear or press the tip of your nose, and it will spring back). In contrast, the bones that make up your skeleton (like the bones in your wrist, leg, or skull) feel hard, rigid, and inflexible—they do not bend easily under gentle pressure and provide a firm, solid structure.