i think its cervical vertebrae
I have a questio on the neck vertebrates. My sister has a straight neck vertebrate and she wants to know if a Person with a straight vertebrate of the neck will suffer from future pain and if there are treatments available? thank-you Samuel
The Beluga whale is a vertebrate, The beluga's seven neck vertebrae are not fused, giving it a flexible, well-defined neck.
No They have the same # of bones in the neck(7)
Cervical vertebrate
Seven. They compose the seven cervical vertebrae. There is another bone in the neck, which is really part of the function of the tongue called the hyoid. Though not considered a neck bone in function it is located in the neck.But, it's not just humans. In fact, all mammals have the same number of bones in their neck, seven, even giraffes.The most common answer is that there are seven vertebra in the neck section of the human spine.There's 28 bones in the human neck (8 cranial, 14 facial, and 6 ear bones).There is some confusion of how many vertebrate there are in the human vertebral column. Neck vertebrate:7 Thoracic vertebrate: 12 Lumbar vertebrate: 5 Sacrum vertebrate: 5 Coccyx vertebrate: 4 The 5 vertebrate of the Sacrum are fused, and may be counted as one. The 4 verterbrate of the Coccyx are also fused, and may be counted as one. This brings the total to 26 or 33.There is some confusion of how many vertebrate there are in the human vertebral column. Neck vertebrate:7 Thoracic vertebrate: 12 Lumbar vertebrate: 5 Sacrum vertebrate: 5 Coccyx vertebrate: 4 The 5 vertebrate of the Sacrum are fused, and may be counted as one. The 4 verterbrate of the Coccyx are also fused, and may be counted as one. This brings the total to 26 or 33.The human neck has 14 bones in it
All mammals are vertebrates, including wallabies.
Because they have extra bony plates between two successive vertebrate.
A Beaver is a vertebrate and a mammal.
vertebrate.
It is a vertebrate. It has a spine.
Short Answer: arms and legs. Long Answer: The Head, as an appendage, includes ears, eyes, nose, lips ... neck!
Cervical vertebrae, C1-C7, are located in the neck and perform the specialized task of supporting the head while it moves around. C1-C7 allow extreme flexibility and range of motion for the head.