It's the same amount of bones we have in our necks apart from their's is streched.
The giraffe's neck has seven bones in their neck, just like humans.12
I'm not sure if they do but a giraffe and a human both have seven so I'm guessing they do.
all mammals descended from a common ancestor.
Yes, it is a mammal, all mammals have backbones. Surprisingly the giraffe has the same number of bones in its neck as other mammals
Cervical vertebrae. All mammals have the same number of cervical vertebrae.
Sloths are mammals and all mammals have bones.
Like almost all mammals, both a human baby and a girrafe have seven cervical vertebrae (bones in the neck). You asked "how is it possible" and the answer would deal with mother nature, natural selection and survivability. Seven bones in the neck works just fine for survival and difernet mammal species adapted the SIZE of those bones depending on their needs. see the related link below for more info about giraffes
All animals with vertebrae have exactly seven cervical vertebrae (neck vertebrae.) Because whales have long necks, they just have seven long cervical vertebrae.
Now, most people would say that there are seven bones in the neck because there are seven cervical vertebrae (neck bones), but they would be incorrect.There are eight bones in the neck. There are the seven cervical vertebrae, plus the hyoid bone which is located in the front part of the neck, just above the thyroid gland. The hyoid bone is a very thin and delicate bone that is somewhat "U" shaped, and serves as a point of attachment for the muscles of the larynx and the tongue.
Yes, because hollow bones don't weigh as much as solid bones and allow the owl to fly.
Yes, of course they have bones. All mammals have bones and hamsters are mammals. They have hair, feed milk to their young, an they are warm blooded! They need bones to move around! Without bones, they would just be a furry blob.
Yes every mammal has back bones.