Spine
Isn't it feet, skull, spine, pelvis, ribs, legs, and arms?
Common Medical Skull cranium jaw bone mandible collar bone clavicle shoulder blade scapula hip bone pelvis funny bone humerus finger bone phalanges vertebrae vertebrae radius radius femur femur shin tibia knee cap patella neck bone clavicle vertebrae ribs ribs upper back-bone thoracic vertebrae lower back-bone lumbar vertebrae fibula fibula ankle tarsals chest bone sternum wrist bone carpals lower wrist metacarpals
The Ribs primary function is to protect the thoracic viscera, or the heart and lungs. The pelvis' main function is to protect the pelvic viscera
In the anterior position (front), the ribs connect to the sternum (breast bone) and in the posterior position (back), the vertebrae. There are free ribs that do not attach at the sternum, they just attach at the vertebrae.
Only the true ribs are attached to the sternum the false ribs (3) and the floating ribs (2) are not directly attached. The flalse ribs are attached indirectly via cartillage and the floating ribs are not attached at all.
Your skull, ribs, and pelvis are attached to your spinal column.
there are several flat bones... The Scapula (shoulder blade), Sternum (breast bone), Cranium (skull), Pelvis and Ribs are all considered to be flat bones.
the skull, pelvis, ribs, and scapula
any of the 12 pairs of ribs the pelvis
spinal cord
Sternum/breast-bone, either directly or not
Isn't it feet, skull, spine, pelvis, ribs, legs, and arms?
When standing upright there are several that are appproximately horizontal to the ground. Several in the feet, part of the pelvis, the ribs and collar bone are the main ones.
Torso-the sternum is the flat bone in the center of your chest between them.
Common Medical Skull cranium jaw bone mandible collar bone clavicle shoulder blade scapula hip bone pelvis funny bone humerus finger bone phalanges vertebrae vertebrae radius radius femur femur shin tibia knee cap patella neck bone clavicle vertebrae ribs ribs upper back-bone thoracic vertebrae lower back-bone lumbar vertebrae fibula fibula ankle tarsals chest bone sternum wrist bone carpals lower wrist metacarpals
The Ribs primary function is to protect the thoracic viscera, or the heart and lungs. The pelvis' main function is to protect the pelvic viscera
In the anterior position (front), the ribs connect to the sternum (breast bone) and in the posterior position (back), the vertebrae. There are free ribs that do not attach at the sternum, they just attach at the vertebrae.