belly button or navel
This is called the navel.
It's where your umbilical cord was attached to your body that's why some people have innies and outies, because it depends where your doctor cut itWhen you grow inside your mother's stomach, you recieve all your nutrition and oxegn through an 'umbicalThe reason you have belly buttons is because when you are born you have an umbilical cord which is taken off or often falls off.belly buttons are what connect to the umbilical cord from the mother so some of her food gets transformed into energy for he babybelly buttons are what connect to the umbilical cord from the mother so some of her food gets transformed into energy for he baby
The small or large intestines depending on specific area. Large intestines are a little above the small. Organ positions also differ from person to person depending on their body shape, stout plump people have a higher stomach, so most probably their small intestines are behind their navel.
Skin 2nd answer: True, but also most tissue in the body will heal with scar tissue if it is lacerated, torn, or incised.
Yes people can scar the iris of their eye.
A scar
No. The naval is a scar where the umbilical cord was attached as a fetus.
It is a scar from the umbilical cord that is removed at birth.
The scar that you see on the abdomen of a fetal pig is where the umbilical cord was attached while they were inside of the female pig. This provided the baby pig with all the nutrients they needed.
It has no 'function' as such, it's simply a scar from where the umbilical cord used to be.
It's where your umbilical cord was attached to your body that's why some people have innies and outies, because it depends where your doctor cut itWhen you grow inside your mother's stomach, you recieve all your nutrition and oxegn through an 'umbicalThe reason you have belly buttons is because when you are born you have an umbilical cord which is taken off or often falls off.belly buttons are what connect to the umbilical cord from the mother so some of her food gets transformed into energy for he babybelly buttons are what connect to the umbilical cord from the mother so some of her food gets transformed into energy for he baby
Once you're born - no. The bellybutton is the scar left over from the umbilical cord, which you don't need once you're born.
Can you please rephrase your question and ask again if you want to get a correct answer.
Yes! The umbilical cord is attached to the fetus internally, not externally. The abdominal wall then forms around the umbilicus. Though all fetuses have umbilical cords not all have belly buttons as newborns. When the umbilical cord is cut in a normally developed newborn, a belly button is created. The belly button is just the outward remnant of the umbilical cord in a normally developed newborn. However, if the abdominal wall fails to close around the umbilical cord, it is entirely possible to be born without a belly button. I was born with a hole in my abdomen and my external organs on the outside of my body. The surgeons put the organs back inside and stitched me up. I assure you, I have no belly button and never have!Some people lose their bellybuttons later in life through surgery b/c of accidents or sickness.
All placental mammals of both genders begin to develop while being attached to an umbilical cord, which breaks or is cut after birth. The belly button is the scar it leaves behind. On some species it's very visible, for others, not so much.
belly buttons are made of tigger guts and dirty buttslol and made from hot dogsYour belly button is a scar were you umbilical cord was cut when you when born.
It's attached to the placenta which is taken out of the woman and the other end which is attached to the baby's navel is cut off. The scar later becomes your bellybutton. They throw the placenta and umbilical cord away as human waste unless you wish to keep it.
The bellybutton is a scar which occurs when the umbilical cord is removed after birth. The umbilical cord is what connects the feotus to the placenta of the mother and is how the feotus is fed by the mother whilst in the womb. Related links: http://www.nhs.uk/chq/Pages/2299.aspx?CategoryID=54&SubCategoryID=128 (NHS umilical cord) http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Belly_button