Collagen Fibers, made up of fibrous protein, which are bundled together into thick collagen fibers. Collagen fibers are extremely tough and provides high tensile strength (which provides resistant property of tendons) Stress tests have show collagen fibers to be stronger than steel fibers of the same size.....EB
Collagenous fibers
macrophages
tendons
Tendons
Type IIB fast glycolytic fibers
The periosteum is the connective tissue around bones and anchor tendons and ligaments to the bones with the help of Sharpie's Fibers.
The Centrosome. It forms Centrioles which form spindle fibers. Some of the spindle fibers attach to the Kinetochore located on the Centromere of chromosomes. The spindle fibers work in conjunction with motor proteins to facilitate disjunction.
tendons
sharpey's fibers
Technically, they're not *tendons*, they're *ligaments*. But YES, there are fibers which hold your teeth to your jawbone.
Tendons are not extensions of muscle fibers. Rather, they are separate bands of tough, fibrous tissue that connect muscle to bone and allow them to move in conjunction.
protein substance that forms the glistening inelastic fibers of connective tissue such as tendons, ligaments, and fascia
Tendons
tendons... :)
A tendon. Ligaments are fibers which aren't supposed to move. Tendons are supposed to move.
Elastic
That attaches muscle to bone.
somatic pain
I think tendons mostly but it could be ligaments