All of the baby teeth fall out and are replaced
The premolars are teeth located between the molars and canine teeth. There are eight premolars, two in each quadrant. The first set of premolar teeth fall out and are replaced by permanent teeth.
Yes they do
yes. i myself have a loose molar at this moment in time. they will fall out and a new adult molar will grow in.
Yes. Humans get two set of teeth.
All the stinking teeth fall out and if they don't, you pull them out.
Yes when molars fall out they grow back !!!
All of them. This is one of the features of some members of the macropod family, not just rock wallabies. They are grazing animals, and need to continuously regrow their molars. Kangaroos, however, do not regrow molars, but have their molars move forwards to replace those that fall out when worn down and unusable.
Generally on the upper jaw, third molars will fall into place nicely if second molars are removed, so it can be a good cost effective orthodontic management technique. On the lower jaw, I would not recommend it.
No. snakes have no molars at all. Molars are milling or crushing teeth. Snakes eat by swallowing their prey that they pull into their throats with sharp-pointed, hooked teeth. Some of the teeth in venomous snakes like cobras, coral snakes, adders and rattlesnakes are hollow for injecting venom, and we cal such teeth fangs; fangs also are sharp pointed.
Yes, pretty much. The molars themselves are not exactly baby teeth as they don't fall out unless there's some sort of infection in the molars, but the incisors are baby teeth and will fall out when the animal reaches around two (sometimes three) years of age.
Adult molars do not grow back. Infant molars are replaced by adult molars, so in a sense, infant molars do grow back.