The right answer is: aorta to smaller systemic arteries to systemic capillaries to systemic veins to right atrium through the tricuspid valve.
The blood pathway is divided into two circuits, both beginning and ending in the heart.
- Systemic circulation (or general circulation, or "circulation")
It begins in the left ventricle, which through an artery distributes oxygenated blood to organs. Then the blood returns to the right heart (right atrium) through the cellar veins.
Each organ has an afferent vessel, supplying blood, and an efferent vessel carrying non-oxygenated blood.
- The pulmonary circulation (or "small circulation")
It begins in the right ventricle, from where the pulmonary artery sends blood without hematosis to a single organ, the lung. The blood is then oxygenated and returns to the left heart (left atrium) by the pulmonary veins.
Answer:
Veins
1l carry blood from tissue of the body to the heart
2) are usually found closer beneath the skin
3) are less muscular then arteries
4) collapse if blood flow stops
arteries
1) carry blood back away from the heart to the tissue of the body.
2) found deeper within the body
3) are more muscular then veins
4) would generally remain open even if blood stops because of it's muscular structure.
It would be making soda I'm pretty sure