the pisifome bone!!
The The pisiforme bone
The bones next to the carp joint are the radius and ulna in the forearm, and the metacarpal bones in the hand. These bones form the structure that supports and allows movement at the carpometacarpal joint.
I think carp stands for metacarpal, but I'm not 100% sure.
The radius and ulna are the two bones that make up the antebrachium.
That part is called a ligament. Ligaments are fibrous tissue that connect bones to each other at a joint and help to stabilize and support the joint during movement.
Scaphoid and lunate. Probably part of the triquetrum also. Distal end of ulna does not take any important part in articulation with the wrist bones.
no they are not. carp are part of the catfish family
The bones of the hand are the carpals (wrist bones), metacarpals (bones under the palm), and phalanges (finger bones). Part of the wrist would include the radius if you consider the wrist part of the hand. The carpals, by name, are the trapezoid, scaphoid, lunate, triquetrum, pisiform, capitate, trapezium, and hamate. The three distinct phalanges are the proximal, middle, and distal phalanges.PhalangesCarpalMetacarpalsare the bones in your hands
A Joint (I)?! Elbow, hip, knee, finger, jaw, neck, ankle A Joint (I)?!
Community Answer 1Yes, a goldfish is actually a carp which is a bony fish.______________________Community Answer 2Yes, since they are part of the phylum osteichthys, meaning bone-fish, they do indeed have bones. No matter how miniscule. So yes this fish does have bones.
A joint by definition is where two bones come together. There are different connective tissues between these two bones. Some of joints are not movable and some are very movable and somewhere in between.
All joints have connective tissues to connect the bones in the joint