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The cranium is not solid in a sense that the bones are fusing together. There are eight crainal bones that surround and protect the brain. The bones fuse together at joints known as sutures. When the sutures are completely fused together the skull is solid
No. Sufferers of the disease, ankylosing spondylitis, end up with their spinal vertebra, and sometimes other bones, fusing together. Their movements are extremely limited, and sometimes they become completely paralysed.
If a cell is 'specialised' - it means it performs a specific function (such as healing wounds or fusing broken bones together).
As a child grows, some bones start fusing together. This makes the person less flexible.
There are about 300 bones in the human newborn baby. Many bones eventually fuse together due to the soft cartilage hardening after the baby is born, the fusing doesn't happen instantly though, it takes months and even years for the cartilage is solidified.
I believe because they are not formed together yet. That's why they are so flexible. As they get older, their bones begin to grow together. I could be wrong, though
When there is Conductive Deafness due to the loss of movement in the ossicles this is called Auditory Ossicle Fixation or Fusion.
A newborn baby has around 300 bones.A baby has 300 bones at birth. As they grow older the small bones grow together unil finaly as as an adult there are 206.A baby has about 300 bones at birth. As they grow small bones grow together and as an adult you have 206 bones.
The average adult human body has 206 bones, with infants having 300-350 and many of these bones fusing as we grow older.
I am not sure about the numbers, but I remember being told that my children's' bones in the head undergo a fusing process. You know that little soft spot right above the forehead that eventually closes and becomes solid? Bones fusing to form a bigger bone.
Either of a pair of bones of the human skull fusing in the midline and forming the upper jaw.