Bone Tissue made up of Osteocytes.
True. Bone cells, such as osteocytes, are indeed arranged in concentric circles around the Haversian canals in compact bone tissue to form structural units called osteons.
osteonic canals
Osseous Tissue
The tissue that has cells arranged in concentric rings is bone tissue, specifically compact bone. This arrangement helps bone tissue withstand mechanical stress and provides strength and support to the body.
Osseous Tissue has this arrangement.
The matrix for bone is laid down in thin layers called lamellae. The lamellae are arranged in concentric patterns around tubes called osteonic canals. Between the layers of lamellae the osteocytes are placed in depressions called lacunae. This pattern of concentric circles forms a cylinder-shaped unit called the osteon.
Osseous tissue has cells that are arranged in concentric circles around a nutrient canal matrix and is hard due to calcium salts.
Osseous tissue is the hardest tissue of the skullcap. The cells are arranged in concentric circles around the nutrient canal and the matrix is hard due to the calcium salts.
Simple columnar epithelial tissue
blood tissue is a tissue which transports the red blood cells ,white blood cells and platelets around the human body.
Bone cells surround Haversian canals. Osteon (Haversian system) is the structural unity of bone. Spaces for osteocytes are called lacunae. The matrix is present in concentric rings called lamellae. Canaliculi are canals that join lacunae with the central Haversian canal (central canal)
The spaces between the spongy mesophyll cells permit gases to move around within the leaf. That is why they are loosely arranged.