Tendon.
tendon
This tissue is a tendon. Tendons always connect muscles to bone. Ligaments connect bone to bone. The odd thing, perhaps, is that these are the same tissue. This an example of tissues being labeled according to anatomy.
because is clots with the process of homeostasis also it connects with cells.
yes its a special type of connective tissue including the red bone marrow and the lymphatic tissue
Bone.
The percentage of connective tissue by volume for the human body is 20.6% (including bone which is a mineralized connective tissue).
tendon (fibrous tissue) connects muscles to bones
Bone connective tissuse connects the bones, and allows them to move.
A tendon is a tough band of fibrous connective tissue that connects muscles to bones
ligaments.
Ligaments and tendons (connective tissue)
Bone connective tissuse connects the bones, and allows them to move.
Connective tissue connects tissues to tissue. A good example is muscle (a tissue) connecting to bone (a tissue). The tissue that does THIS is called a tendon. A tendon connects muscles to bones.
Muscle does not connect to muscle. Fascia is a connective tissue that connects muscle to organs. Tendons connect muscle to bone.
Connective Tissue is the tissue that connects the skin to the muscle.
A tendon (or sinew) is a tough band of fibrous connective tissue that connects muscle to bone or muscle to muscle and is designed to withstand tension. Tendons are similar to ligaments except that ligaments join one bone to another. Tendons and muscles work together and can only exert a pulling force.Better AnswerThe connective tissue that connects muscle and bone is called the Periosteum, which is the connective tissue covering of the Bone. The tendon is a middleman that connects the bone to the muscle. The tendon is continuous with the muscle via Epimysium, which the outer covering of the muscle.Muscle is attached to bone by tendons.
It is connective tissue that connects bone to muscle, or muscle to muscle (i.e.tendons or ligaments, respectively).
bones