They are analogous. The function is different, but they have a common ancestoral origin.
yes
There are any things that could happen when you pull on one of the arm muscles in the chicken wing. It is likely that you'll break a bone or tear tissues.
Yes. We have a common ancestor. Our arm bone is like the bats wing bone
The bird's wing has a fairly rigid bone structure, and the main flying muscles move the bones at the point where the wing connects to the body. A bat has a much more flexible wing structure. It is very much like a human arm and hand, except it has a thin membrane of skin (called the patagium) extending between the "hand" and the body, and between each finger bone. Bats can move the wing like a hand, essentially "swimming" through the air. The "thumb" extends out of the wing as a small claw, which bats use to climb up trees and other structures. This helps them reach a high "launching point" for flight takeoff. Appropriately, the order of bats is called Chiroptera, Greek for "hand-wing."
Learning that the flipper of a whale is really just like your upper arm.
Yes, they are limbs (equivalent to our arms).
yes
the structures of a chicken wings and the human arm adapt to served different function
the arm
the wing
because humans
Arm bones of all mammals . APEX=A bird's wing bone
A bird's wing bone
well the difference is that a human arm isn't white and human's don't eat there own arm's and a chicken wing is white and you eat em'
Because it has comparable joints - like the shoulder, elbow and wrist.
The wing of a bat. The leg of a horse...
Radius and ulna