The umbilical cord.
Umbilical cord
a developing fetus receives nourishment from the placenta, which is burrowed into the uterus
The fetus inside of a mother's womb receives nourishment via the umbilical cord from the food the mother ingests.
A tether in women typically refers to an umbilical cord that connects the fetus to the mother's placenta, providing nourishment and oxygen during pregnancy.
The organ that provides the nourishment is the placenta but the umbilical cord transports the nutrients to the fetus.
The fetus is in the uterus where it gets nourishment from the placenta via the umbilical cord.
Everything the fetus needs is provided by the placenta.
The fetus receives oxygen and nourishment from the placenta via the umbilical cord. Waste and carbon dioxide return to the placenta via the umbilical cord.
by the placenta.
The umbilical cord takes nutrients and oxygen to the fetus.
It suggests the fetus is positioned head down
The placenta has the job of taking everything from your body that the baby needs (ie: oxygen from the blood, nutrients, etc) and filters it out... the umbilical cord carries these 'needs' to the baby so he/she can grow healthy :)