Everywhere in your body
connective tissue
Ligaments are the fibrous connective tissue that holds bones in a joint together.
There is no fibrous connective tissue in bone, but there is dense irregular tissue known as periosteum that covers bones (all except the articulating surfaces) and provides attachment sites for tendons and ligaments.
A fibrous joint is a structural classification where bones are joined by fibrous connective tissue. Examples of fibrous joints include sutures in the skull and syndesmoses in the distal tibiofibular joint.
The fibrous connective tissue joining the tooth to the tooth socket is the periodontal ligament.
Fibrous connective tissue
fibrous connective tissue
Fibrous protein
The group of tissue with the two types, soft and hard tissue, is connective tissue. Loose connective tissue and fibrous connective tissue hold your body parts together.
The diaphysis is covered and protected by a fibrous connective tissue membrane, the periosteum.
Connective tissue
The spine