HSC Stuff > HSC Biology
Scientific diagrams
sidzeman:
Our teacher has told us there will be guaranteed be a question on drawing a scientific diagram of xylem and phloem or blood cells in our trials
Unfortunately I've forgotten my year 7 basics and forgot the rules of drawing a diagram
Pls remind me and if you can provide examples of scientific diagrams that we need to know for the bio course thank!
pikachu975:
--- Quote from: sidzeman on August 13, 2017, 01:45:48 pm ---Our teacher has told us there will be guaranteed be a question on drawing a scientific diagram of xylem and phloem or blood cells in our trials
Unfortunately I've forgotten my year 7 basics and forgot the rules of drawing a diagram
Pls remind me and if you can provide examples of scientific diagrams that we need to know for the bio course thank!
--- End quote ---
For xylem and phloem you need to be able to draw a transverse section:
https://image.slidesharecdn.com/1monocotdicot-101019024059-phpapp01/95/chapter-9-transport-in-plants-lesson-1-monocotyledons-and-dicot-23-728.jpg?cb=1287523931
Here's a good one (The diagram on the left)
And you need to know how to draw a longitudinal section:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/staticarchive/bd77a28b8e10ecd031c7db5199597705007e270f.jpg
Remember to label "perforations" for those circular stuff on the xylem (or you can draw them just as horizontal lines with a gap in the middle. For phloem label the "sieve plates" as those circular plates and label "companion cells" with the nuclei inside of them.
For blood cells, red blood cell is 6-8 um and white blood cell is 12-15 um. Make sure to include a scale in these e.g. 1 um = 1 cm. Red blood cells make sure you draw the two arc-shaped lines (like dimples) and label them as biconcave and make sure the shape of the RBC is circular. For WBC the shape is less circular and more elliptical and you must draw a nucleus and label that.
Opengangs:
Hi, sidzeman!
For scientific diagrams, you should always draw what you see. For example, if you're drawing transverse and longitudinal cuts, you draw what you see, and not what you expect to see. Drawing what you expect to see defeats the purpose of a first-hand investigation. I know there were a few people who were marked down in our practical trial exam because they were drawing what is expected, and not their actual.
Furthermore, you should draw with pencil (2B, I think, was the recommended style) and label everything.
For a full checklist, feel free to see here.
sidzeman:
Would these diagrams be appropriate?
Also: are the labelling lines not meant to have arrowheads?
pikachu975:
--- Quote from: sidzeman on August 13, 2017, 04:26:46 pm ---Would these diagrams be appropriate?
Also: are the labelling lines not meant to have arrowheads?
--- End quote ---
The transverse section on the right are missing cambium (middle of xylem/phloem) and pith (the centre).
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