no, the skeleton is a support structure. The muscles expand and contract to create movement in the body.
No...bones are the infrastructure to which tendons/ligaments and muscles attach to facilitate movement.
The bone cell moves through the support of the muscles. The cell muscles will expand and contract which will result into movement of the bone cell.
I have bone marrows in my bones because they produce most of the cells in our body like the white and red blood cells which are essential in my body.
No
tissue
Muscle cells are formed in such a way that they contract and shorten. By doing this they produce a movement of one type or another. Skeletal muscle cells (called fibers) pull one bone towards another bone, smooth muscles fibers shorten as well but they don't act on bones. They produce waves of movement.
Bone building cells are called osteoblasts. These osteoblasts are responsible for both building and repairing the bone tissues in the body.
Mature bone cells, called osteocytes, are found in the hard portions of every bone in the body.
Your bone marrow produces new blood cells.
In bone, there are osteoblasts (cells which build bone) and osteoclasts (cells which break down bone). In the bone marrow and spongy bone, there are hematopoietic cells (cells which make blood). Bone is a type of connective tissue that is made of specialized cells that all work together for a common function. Their cellular and extracellular matrix is what makes bone cells so unique. Yes. Bones contain tissues and cells. They have cells called chondrocytes, osteoblasts, and osteocytes. And the tissues they form make connective tissue called bone. Bone is osseous tissue and has calcium and phosphorous in its extra cellular matrix.
Bone cells help you stand up and move. As well as helping your body produce red blood cells.
The blood cells are usually manufactured in the bone marrow.
no. a kidney is not composed of body cells. but liver, sperm, and a single bone are composed of body cells. :)