Fine filament growing from mammalian skin. Each hair grows from a pit-shaped follicle embedded in the second layer of the skin, the dermis. It consists of dead cells impregnated with the protein
keratin.
The average number of hairs on a human head varies from 98,000 (red-heads) to 120,000 (blondes). Each grows at the rate of 510 mm/0.20.4 in per month, lengthening for about three years before being replaced by a new one. A coat of hair helps to insulate land mammals by trapping air next to the body. The thickness of this layer can be varied at will by raising or flattening the coat. In some mammals a really heavy coat may be so effective that it must be shed in summer and a thinner one grown. Hair also aids camouflage, as in the zebra and the white winter coats of Arctic animals; protection, as in the porcupine and hedgehog; bluffing enemies by apparently increasing the size, as in the cat; sexual display, as in humans and the male lion; and its colouring or erection may be used for communication.
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