The blue blood is dirty blood and it is the blood in the Venas, which bring the blood back to the heart. The red blood is clean and it travels through Arteries and is full with oxygen and travels through the body supplying the organs with oxygen. Hmmmmm damn i didn't think i could remeber all this sh!t after 10th grade
The blue blood is diety blood and it is the blood in the Venas, which bring the blood back to the heart. The red blood is clean and it travels through Arteries and is full with oxygen and travels through the body supplying the organs with oxygen. Hmmmmm damn i didn't think i could remeber all this sh!t after 10th grade [/b][/quote] So, what Bryan sed is wrong. But, actually, when someone said "blood", i suppose he talked about the blood you see coming out of the wounds when u fight with an admin ( ) :chemist:
But see i'm not, I said blood inside your body is blue. And technically, there is blue blood in your body.
Blood inside your body that is heading back to the heart is purple, not blue. After it leaves the heart and returns to the bloodstream it is red, and it's red when you bleed because, when the oxygen hits the blood, it turns red, because it's been - in a sense - replenished. Now, drop it.
Warning: Will make your blood stay blue, the color of blood inside your body. Ok, sorry, i'll stop it...but I still think its blue. Thats what my health teacher said.
Your health teacher is wrong, now DROP IT. Warning: May cause Will to buy flavored water, a.k.a. Gatorade.
Your health teacher is wrong, now DROP IT. Warning: May cause Will to buy flavored water, a.k.a. Gatorade. [/b][/quote] That stuff rules dude, its clear yet it tastes like strawberry, orange, or any of the other flavors. Warning: Drinking will make you go buy the Clear Gatorade because its better.
Caution: Wait for the light to turn green before proceding to open the bottle... time to wait: 10 years.
I found this online: First thing: Blood is *never* blue. Blood is described as dark red (venous) or bright red (arterial). Our veins look blue because we are looking at them *through* our skin. The blood inside them is dark red and it doesn't reflect light very well. The blood you see when you get hurt is usually venous blood. Arterial blood comes out in spurts. It spurts every time the heart beats. I hope you never see that. Blue is the wrong answer.
Dark red is kind of like purple, it depends on the shade. And, the reason that it is bright red after receiving a wound is because the oxygen is reaching the red blood carpussels (they're not cells, as they have no true nuclei) replenishing them, so their color changes. If there was no oxygen, you'd bleed dark red/purple.