Hair 101 [Show Notes]


Key Words

  • Keratin = a fibrous protein that cells make when they are about to die.
  • Cornification = the process of a cell filling up with Keratin and becoming hard.
  • Follicle = the hole in the skin where the hair grows out
  • Melanin = a protein that adds color to cells of the body (most familiar because they help skin tan)

Hand-drawn and colored sketch of the layer of skin where hair grows from, with labeled parts.

Hair Basics

Arrector pili = the muscle that makes your hairs stand up

Fingernails and hair are made out of keratinized cells.  Nails are harder to protect the more tender skin below (and are a primitive tool).  Hair is tightly stacked but more flexible.  They are both dead cells so they don’t absorb nutrients or feel.

Because hair grows when cells lining the follicles fill up with keratin and die, it grows from your scalp, rather than being added to the ends.

Cells in the bulb divide every 23-72 hours.

Straight or curly is determined by the shape of the follicle.  Symmetrical = straight, asymmetrical = curly.  Square follicles is a myth.

There are 2 types of melanin – eumelanin = dark colors; pheomelanin = light.  Genetics determines what ratio of each type your skin produces thus determines the color of your hair.  It turns gray because the cells are absent of all melanin types.

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Music Credits:  “Radio Martini” Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)  Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0  http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/