The cervical region, the thoracic region, and the lumbar region (and to be technical the sacral and the coccyx region as well).
3 regions
7 cervical
12 Thoracic
5 Lumbar
The Lumbar region of the spine.
The vertebral column and skull is another description for the spinal column. See the related link for more information. The entire vertebral column consists of the skull, the 33 vertebrae and the ribcage.
The bones of the skeleton are in some way connected to the vertebral column.
dorsal means being behind in position of so yes it is dorsal to the sternum
No. "Backbone" is a common name for the spinal/vertebral column. Intervertebral disks are the the pieces of cartilage found between the individual vertebral bones in the column/backbone.
Some afflictions of the vertebral column are scoliosis, lordosis, and kyphosis. These all deal with a curvatures in different regions of the vertebral column.
Lordosis an anteriorly convex curvature of the vertebral column; the normal lordoses of the cervical and lumbar regions are secondary curvatures of the vertebral column, acquired postnatally
The vertebral column is inferior to the skull.
The Lumbar region of the spine.
the sternum is anterior to the vertebral column
the sternum is anterior to the vertebral column
Primary curvature is the concave curve of the fetal vertebral column. This is apparent in the adult thoracic and sacral regions.
vertebral column is inferior to the tranchea
the vertebral column is located below your skull on your back.
Lumbar vertebral column
yes, all vertebrates and chordates have a vertebral column
Primary curvature is the concave curve of the fetal vertebral column. This is apparent in the adult thoracic and sacral regions.