No there 2 different body parts
The function of a cow's heart is the same as a human heart - to circulate blood throughout the body. The cow's heart is very similar to a human heart in structure.
Yes. People eat cow's liver.
there is more vitamin A in a husky liver than a cow liver.
There is no such thing called a sow cow. It is just the salchow.
They have things in common because they do a similar job but they are not the same. The nearest comparison to our own heart is the pigs heart.
no. it is called liver because it is the liver of a cow.
All the stuff you can't see outside. Seriously, all a cow's organs (heart, lungs, stomach, intestines, liver, kidneys, etc.) plus bones, muscles, nervous system, endocrine system, and the veins and arteries that pump blood from and to different parts of the cow's body are all contained inside a cow. Yes, a cow is a living breathing thing just like you, not some sort of man-machine.
No. Every last cow cell in a cow are eukaryotic.
Much of the internal organs of a cow are the same as the internal organs that are in a human being or any other mammal, except for a few other appendages. Cows have a functional cecum, for one, and a cow's stomach is divided up into four compartments called the rumen, reticulum, omasum and abomasum. The rest of the organs (heart, liver, lungs, kidneys, pancreas, etc.) are the same as with any other mammal.
Calf's liver comes from a baby cow.
I have no clue and I am wandering the same thing
Bovine = cow, so obviously it would be from a cow, not a pig. And a heart valve is just a flap of skin in the heart that controls blood flow in the four chambers of the cow's heart.