No, the canals are present in the compact bone (surrounds the spongy bone) and are called Haversian canals.
no
Trabeculae are found in spongy or cancellous bone.
Canals in the bone in which blood vessels pass. Blood vessels from outside the bone penetrate the compact bone to the spongy bone through the PERFORATING CANALS.
For a bone (or anything else) to be spongy, it has to have vast numbers of tiny gaps, holes, or what are in effect tiny canals. One large canal can be replaced by lots of smaller ones.
Central canals extend longitudinally through bone tissue and transerse perforating canals connect them. -Brandy James :)
Spongy Bone.
The Haversian canals carry blood vessels and nerves to and from the bone.
The cement line is what connects the central canals. They are made up of different layers of compact bone tissue.
Well, all I know is that they are both not completely solid. You might already know that spongy bone isn't solid, but you might not know that compact bone isn't completely solid either, it just looks that way. It has tiny canals running through it.
Spongy bone is found in the epiphysis part of bone
Actually the compact bone isn't spongy at all, the compact bone is a tough layer making the bone neither too rigid or too brittle. So the compact bone is not spongy. Spongy bone, like its name is spongy.
The spongy bone is strong but lightweight.
A spongy bone is also called a cancellous bone or trabecular bone..