As long the surfaces are clean and dry you could probably get away with a bit of double-sided sticky tape.
Seriously, my grasp of Biology leaves a lot to be desired but I'll try and look this up for you. Back soon.
It would appear that the placenta is attached to the embryo by the umbilical cord.
The embryo is attached to the placenta by the umbilical cord. This is cut at birth and it is why people have belly buttons. Your belly button is where your umbilical cord used to be.
The umbilical cord.
The cord does it. 👈💖
the umbilical cord
umbilical cord.
No. The womb is your uterus. The placenta is what attaches the baby to the umbilical chord and provides the baby with nutrients. During labor the female will expel the placenta after the baby is delivered.
The placenta attaches to the child by three blood vessels that make up the umbilical cord. The umbilical cord has three blood vessels one for oxygen and nutrients from the placenta to the baby and two arteries carry deoxygenated fetal blood from the baby back to the placenta.
THE PLACENTA is visibly formed at 12 weeks gestation. At about this point, the placenta takes over a very BIG job from moms hormones. The placenta is now 100 percent responsible for nourishing the fetus. The placenta attaches to the baby at the umbilical cord, or the "belly- button." The placenta is called the babys life support system because it provides everything the fetus needs to stay alive until birth. Without the placenta, the baby would die.
the babies get food through the umbilical cord, which is connected to the mother. :) The umbilical cord is connected to the placenta that attaches to the uterine wall of the mother.
The embryo attaches to the placenta when it reaches the uterus very early in a pregnancy.
The embryo attaches to the mother
The placenta is a large organ that attaches to the wall of a pregnant womans womb, extracts nutrients and oxygen from her blood and feeds them to her developing baby. It is formed of cells from the embryo, so is not part of the mother. After the baby is born it is ejected from the womb, forming the "afterbirth". Most mammals use a placenta, the exceptions being the marsupials (kangaroo, opossom etc) and monotremes.
The umbilical cord attatches the placenta to the baby's belly.
The embryo and placenta grow side by side and are attached via the umbilical cord - the placenta attaches to the uterine wall as it develops after the embryo implants in the uterine lining. Some women have spotting and slight cramps when the embryo attaches to the uterine lining.
the cord attaches to the babies stoumuc thus making your belly button and then it ataches to the placenta witch is in the womb i believe and thus feeds the babie
A Diaphragm is a muscular, membranous or ligamentous wall separating two cavities or limiting a cavity.A Placenta is the part of the ovary of flowering plants that bears the ovules.The placenta and the diaphragm are two very different things.The placenta is found only in pregnant women. It attaches the unborn baby to its mother while it's in the uterus. The placenta comes out along with the baby at birth.The diaphragm is a muscle beneath the lungs that is curved upwards when it's at rest. When a person breathes in, the muscle contracts, flattening out and increasing the volume of the chest cavity. This allows the person to take a bigger breath.
The nutrients of the baby is located at the placenta while the umbilical cord links the placenta and the baby.