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epithelial cartilage
Cartilage. Adults have cartilage in their joints, sternum, etc. Young babies have very little solid bone, but much cartilage.
The old plate subduct because it is denser thatn the young plate.
We all have cartilage at the tips of our growing bones but as we get older and stop growing the cartilage has mainly disappeared. This growing process is generally completed by the time we are 25 years old. Babies and young children would have a larger amount of cartilage than a teenager. Adults have cartilage in their ears and nose.
Yes
Stingrays are related to sharks and have cartilage throughout their bodies. When a stingray gives birth, they birth live young.
Thats not bone. The outer ear and tip of the nose is made of something called cartilage. When you are born, most of your body is made of cartilage. Over your childhood, cartilage fuses into bones, this is also why babies and young children are more flexible that grown adults. Some parts of your body, such your nose and your ear, never change into bone, and are forever cartilage. :)
The red sea is a young divergent plate boundary, otherwise known as a rift zone.
It involves a naked young woman, a pile of her own feces and a plate. Let your imagination go wild.
The three types of age structures are: young-age structure (high proportion of young individuals), stationary age structure (relatively equal proportion of individuals across age groups), and old-age structure (high proportion of older individuals).
Adolescence.
They are haunted for their meat, for their fat, and for their young individuals.