Vertebrae. The specific names from behind the skull are:
Atlas or C1 (first cervical vertebra)
Axis or C2 (second cervical vertebra)
the remaining vertebrae are C3 through C7)
They have the same number of vertebrae as nearly all mammals.
The horse's forelimb, starting at the top Scapula (shoulder blade), humerus (embedded in the body with the shoulder blade), the elbow joint, the Ulna/Radius (called the forearm and the first long bone), the carpus (called the knee but actually the equivalent of the human wrist), the 3rd metacarpal (called the cannon bone) and it's associated 2nd/4th metacapals (called the splint bones) represent the second long bone. These bones are equivalent to bones in the body of the human hand that attach from the wrist to the index, middle and ring fingers.
Lets start with the skull. Probably the thickest, most dense bone. The spine, legs and ribs run a close 2nd.
Metacarpal, Proximal sesamoids, Proximal phalanx, Middle phalanx, Distal phalanx, Distal sesamoid
YOU CAN BREAK YOUR NECK,BACK LEG,ANKLE,ARM OR ANY BONES REALY
The only bones (vertebrae) in your neck are from the spinal column. These are better known as the Cervical vertebra, of which you have seven, medically speaking they are labelled C1 - C7.
Giraffes bones are similer to a horses just their neck is longer, made of small bones connected by tendons. sort of like ur spine
an elephant has seven bones in its neck
How many bones In your neck
How many bones baby have in their neck and why?
it is when the second horses head is even with the winning horses neck.
The sternum of a horse has 54 sternebrae, and a 205 bones all together. Horses also have forelimbs and hind limbs that connect to the vertebrae. 60% of the names for the horse bone are the same as the human name.
Both have the same number of neck bones but giraffes neck bones are longer
The sternum of a horse has 54 sternebrae, and a 205 bones all together. Horses also have forelimbs and hind limbs that connect to the vertebrae. 60% of the names for the horse bone are the same as the human name.
There is much controversy, but the giraffe's neck has the same number of bones as a human neck: seven.
The P2 (short pastern bone), the P3 (coffin bone) and the navicular bone