So, option B nervous tissue is the correct answer.
Answer: The eyeball is the only organism which does not grow from birth. It is fully grown when you are born. When you look at a baby's face, so see mostly iris and little white. As the baby grows, you get to see more and more of the eyeball.
As puberty progresses, the growth plates mature, and at the end of puberty they fuse and stop growing. The whole of the skeleton does not stop growing at the same time; hands and feet stop first, then arms and legs, with the last area of growth being the spine.
Hair is the fastest growing tissue in the body, second only to bone marrow. 35 meters of hair fibre is produced every day on the average adult scalp.
Your eyeballs stay the same size from birth to death, while your nose and ears continue to grow.
The earliest structures to reach their adult status are the head, hands, and feet. The spurt in muscle, of both limbs and heart, coincides with the spurt in skeletal growth, for both are caused by the same hormones.
The skin is the body's largest organ.
Calves. Calf muscles are also considered as one of the most difficult to grow in the gym, to the point where many people give up trying.
While the rest of our body shrinks as we get older, our noses, earlobes and ear muscles keep getting bigger. That's because they're made mostly of cartilage cells, which divide more as we age.
Changes in Boys
They tend to grow most quickly between ages 12 and 15. The growth spurt of boys is, on average, about 2 years later than that of girls. By age 16, most boys have stopped growing, but their muscles will continue to develop.
When Do You Stop Growing? For both girls and boys, growth typically stops when puberty ends. For girls, who begin puberty earlier than boys, that is around age 15 or 16. For boys, growth can continue until around age 18.
The only bones that continue to get larger are the skull and the pelvis. The growth of these two body parts isn't dramatic, however. Your pelvis might gain an inch in diameter between the ages of 20 and 79, and your skull may get slightly more prominent around the forehead.
Will humans ever be able to re-grow limbs or organs? Humans have the necessary genes to build limbs and organs. As embryos we develop and grow all the limbs and organs we need! However, we don't have the ability to re-activate these genes when injuries occur.
Growing an entire limb
For a limb to regenerate, you need bone, muscle, blood vessels and nerves. There are adult stem cells, a kind of undifferentiated cell that can become specialized, that regenerate muscle, but they don't seem to activate.
The Stapedius, the smallest skeletal muscle in the human body, which is about 1 mm in length, is regarded to be the weakest muscle. It originates from a prominence known as the pyramidal eminence at the posterior edge of the tympanic cavity. It inserts into the stapes' neck.
The palmaris longus is a muscle visible as a small tendon located between the flexor carpi radialis and the flexor carpi ulnaris, although it is not always present. It is absent in about 14 percent of the population; this number can vary in African, Asian, and Native American populations, however.
Glutes and Hips
The glutes and hips are some of the most common weak muscles. Inactivity from sitting is often the culprit.
Late teens and early twenties are the perfect age to start bodybuilding. Puberty and bodybuilding are closely related because this is the fastest time for muscle growth. Between, 17-25, you will experience testosterone driven growth burst in your muscles.
The heart has the ability to beat over 3 billion times in a person's life. The strongest muscle based on its weight is the masseter. With all muscles of the jaw working together it can close the teeth with a force as great as 55 pounds (25 kilograms) on the incisors or 200 pounds (90.7 kilograms) on the molars.
The first heaviest organ is the skin with a mass of four to five kg. The liver is the second heaviest organ in the body, which discharges bile. The weight of the liver is about 1.5 kg. The brain is the third heaviest organ with an approximate mass of 1.5 kg.
The pineal gland is the smallest organ in the human body. The pineal gland is located near the center of the brain. The name pineal comes as pineal is a small pine-shaped gland. The pineal gland controls the body's internal clock since it regulates the daily rhythms of the body.
Apple Shape
Also called a “beer belly,” it means you have more fat stored around your stomach, while your lower body stays thin.