Anatomical Position
Anatomical Position
Section titled “Anatomical Position”Definition
Section titled “Definition”Anatomical position is the standard reference posture used when describing the orientation of skeletal structures. It helps different observers describe the same structure in a consistent way.
Why It Matters
Section titled “Why It Matters”Without a shared reference position, descriptions of direction and location can become dependent on the viewer’s angle. Anatomical position gives students and educators a stable starting point for comparison.
How to Read It
Section titled “How to Read It”- Identify the assumed orientation of the body or skeleton.
- Describe the structure relative to the organism, not the viewer.
- Use anatomical position before applying directional terms.
Teaching Use
Section titled “Teaching Use”Use this term to help students describe what they see before making a functional or comparative interpretation.
Related Terms
Section titled “Related Terms”Related Museum Pages
Section titled “Related Museum Pages”Public Sources
Section titled “Public Sources”Public sources will be added as this entry is reviewed and expanded.
Scope Note
Section titled “Scope Note”This entry explains terminology and observable features for teaching and documentation. It does not provide specimen preparation, biological material handling, acquisition guidance, or species/individual identification procedures.