Hi in grad school taking microanatomy and pathology classes, 2 that I heard are 
this:  The surface area of all the alveoli in the lungs of an adult is between 
40-70 square meters. That seems reasonable in having a 40-70 square meter 
surface (where all gas exchange takes place) represent all the gas exchange in 
lungs. Have seen that figure numerous times so while can't test it, can believe 
it.  The other one that I also can't test and is hard to believe is that the 
sum total length of all vessels (large small, artery vein down to every single 
capillary) in one adult measures about 100,000 kilometers (62,000 miles). Again 
there are many disparate medical and anatomical references so either all right 
or all wrong. 



The 2 micron sectioned egg I don't believe. (1) There are 25,400 microns in an 
inch. A 2 inch long egg is about 50,000 microns long. At 2 microns per section 
thats about 25,000 egg sections.  Even is each section is 2 square inches 
(that's generous since each end isn't close to 2 squre inches in area), thats 
100,000 square inches. At 1,296 square inches per square yard, that's about 40 
square yards which is far short of a football field (100 yards x 53 yards). (2) 
If you calculate the volume of a "solid rectangle" covering a football feild 
that is 100 yards x 53 yards x 2 microns and of course converting all to yards 
or microns, the answer is a specific volume.  If you take the volume of an 
ellipsoid which is four thirds times pi times a times b times c with a, b and c 
being the lenggth of the 3 axis of the ellipsoid, and using approximate 
measurements for the egg, I come up with far , far less volume in egg than in 
the "rectangular solid" covering football field. (3) This is a classical 
calculus definte integral washer problem. Whether this egg as an ellipsoid is 
scalene, oblate or prolate, integrating volume over the limits of integration 
gives me much, much less volume than is needed to cover a football field 2 
microns thick.  Have tried all 3 methods and converting everything to  microns 
or yards using scientific notation. So 6 calculations.  Everytime I come up 
somewhere close to the area of 2 micron slices covering approximately 1/100 of 
the football field. 



Unless my math is all wrong, or this is a humongous, enormous ostrich and not 
chicken egg. 



Ray 

Raymond Koelling 

PhenoPath Labs 

Seattle, WA 


----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Disher Lori" <[email protected]> 
To: [email protected] 
Sent: Tuesday, April 14, 2009 12:12:40 PM GMT -08:00 US/Canada Pacific 
Subject: [Histonet] Lab Week-Histology Trivial or Fun Facts 

Hello, 
  I was wondering if anyone has some histo trivial-fun facts to share for Lab 
Week?  I remember a supervisor told me long ago that she was told while in 
training, that if you took a hard boilded egg and sectioned it at 2 microns you 
would have enough sections to cover a football field.  Has anyone ever heard 
that one before?  Can anyone contribute any others?  We are trying to come up 
with some games for lab week. 
Lori 

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