The ilium, ischium, and pubis all fuse to form the coxal bone. The coxal bone is more commonly know as the hip bone.
I think it's the ilium, pubis, ischium
The three bones that fuse together to form the coxal, or the hip bone, in early adulthood are: the pubis, the ilium, and the ischium.
The saccrum
The fully developed, adult coxal bone (or innominate bone or hip bone) is made up of three parts: The ischium, the ilium and the pubis. These three bones meet at the triradiate cartilage in an immature individual and eventually fuse as the individual reaches skeletal maturity (15-16 years old). The triradiate cartilage can be found at the base of the acetabulum.
The hip bone is called the Coxal
Mostly they fuse with a neighboring bone to form one bigger bone instead of two or more separate bones.
The three bones that fuse together to form the coxal, or the hip bone, in early adulthood are: the pubis, the ilium, and the ischium.
The coxal bone parts include the ilium, ischium and pubis
The saccrum
The fully developed, adult coxal bone (or innominate bone or hip bone) is made up of three parts: The ischium, the ilium and the pubis. These three bones meet at the triradiate cartilage in an immature individual and eventually fuse as the individual reaches skeletal maturity (15-16 years old). The triradiate cartilage can be found at the base of the acetabulum.
The hip bone is called the Coxal
the answer is the sacrum
Mostly they fuse with a neighboring bone to form one bigger bone instead of two or more separate bones.
They are hip bones that make up the pelvic girdle.
The fontanel fuses through a process of intramembranous ossification. Most of the other bones in the body undergo intracartilaginous ossification. There are many bones that do this, in particular, one of them is the coxal bone, also called the OS coxa, and it starts out as three separate bones; ilium, ischium, and pubis.
Babies have more bones than adults because as they grow up, some of the bones fuse together to form one bone ...
There are actually three bones that form the "hip". They are the ilia which fuse with the sacral vertebrae, the pubes which fuse ventrally with each other to form the ventral surface of the pelvic canal and the posterior ischia
acetabulumThe ilium, ischium, and pubis fuse at the deep hemispherical socket called the acetabulum (literally, "wine cup"), which receives the head of the thigh bone.