Coweye PDF
Coweye PDF
Coweye PDF
Safety first!
You’ll be using a scalpel or a razor to cut the cow’s eye.
Be careful. A scalpel or razor can cut you as easily as it
cuts the cow’s eye.
RETINA
OPTIC NERVE
PUPIL
AQUEOUS HUMOR
IRIS
This diagram shows the parts of the eye. Can you find these parts in a cow’s eye?
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the middle of the eye.
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cutting the eye in half. You’ll end up with two halves. On
the front half will be the cornea.
The cornea is made of pretty tough stuff—it helps protect
your eye. It also helps you see by bending the light that
comes into your eye.
Once you have removed the cornea, place it on the board
(or cutting surface) and cut it with your scalpel or razor.
Listen. Hear the crunch? That’s the sound of the scalpel
crunching through layers of clear tissue. The cow’s cornea
has many layers to make it thick and strong. When the
cow is grazing, blades of grass may poke the cow’s eye—
but the cornea protects the inner eye.
The next step is to pull out the iris. The iris is between
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the cornea and the lens. It may be stuck to the cornea
or it may have stayed with the back of the eye. Find the
iris and pull it out. It should come out in one piece. You
can see that there’s a hole in the center of the iris. That’s
the pupil, the hole that lets light into the eye. The iris
contracts or expands to change the size of the pupil. In
dim light, the pupil opens wide to let light in. In bright
light, the pupil shuts down to block light out.
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The back of the eye is filled with a clear jelly. That’s the
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vitreous humor, a mixture of protein and water. It’s clear
so light can pass through it. It also helps the eyeball main-
tain its shape.
Now you want to remove the lens. It’s a clear lump about
the size and shape of a squashed marble.
The lens of the cow’s eye feels soft on the outside and
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What do you see?
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the words on the page. What do you see?
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The retina is made of cells that can detect light. The eye’s
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lens uses the light that comes into the eye to make an
image, a picture made of light. That image lands on the
retina. The cells of the retina react to the light that falls on
them and send messages to the brain.
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attached to the back of the eye at just one spot. Can you
find that spot? That’s the place where nerves from all the
cells in the retina come together. All these nerves go out
the back of the eye, forming the optic nerve, the bundle
of nerves that carries messages from the eye to the brain.
The brain uses information from the retina to make a
mental picture of the world.
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from the tapetum.
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Look at the other side of the back of the eye. Can you find
the optic nerve? To see the separate fibers that make up
the optic nerve, pinch the nerve with a pair of scissors
or your fingers. If you squeeze the optic nerve, you may
get some white goop. That is myelin, the fatty layer that
surrounds each fiber of the nerve.
Clean-up
When you’re done dissecting the cow’s eye, wrap all the
pieces of the eye in plastic and throw them away. If you
used a razor blade, dispose of it properly. A razor blade is
only good for one or two dissections.
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Glossary
aqueous humor optic nerve
A clear fluid that helps the cornea keep its The bundle of nerve fibers that carry information
rounded shape. from the retina to the brain.
pupil
blind spot
The pupil is the dark circle in the center of your
The place where all nerves from the retina join to iris. It’s a hole that lets light into the inner eye. Your
form the optic nerve. Each eye has a blind spot pupil is round. A cow’s pupil is oval.
where there are no light-sensitive cells.
cones
retina
The layer of light-sensitive cells at the back of the
One kind of light-sensitive cell in the retina. Cones
eye. The retina detects images focused by the
give you color vision in bright light.
cornea and the lens. The retina is connected to the
brain by the optic nerve.
cornea
A tough, clear covering over the iris and the pupil rods
that helps protect the eye. Light bends as it passes
One kind of light-sensitive cell in the retina. Rods
through the cornea. The cornea begins bending
respond in dim light.
light to make an image; the lens finishes the job.
iris sclera
The thick, tough, white outer covering of the
A muscle that controls how much light enters the
eyeball.
eye. It is suspended between the cornea and the
lens. A cow’s iris is brown. Human irises come in
many colors, including brown, blue, green, and tapetum
gray. The colorful, shiny material located behind the
retina. Found in animals with good night vision,
lens the tapetum reflects light back through the retina.
A clear, flexible structure that makes an image on
the eye’s retina. The lens is flexible so that it can vitreous humor
change shape, focusing on objects that are close The thick, clear jelly that helps give the eyeball its
up and objects that are far away. shape.
myelin
The fatty layer that surrounds each nerve fiber.