vertebraes
Your spine is made up of vertebra. Tarsals are in your feet!
No, the backbone is made up of a series of bones called vertebrae, with cartilage discs in between. Tendons are tough, fibrous tissues that connect muscles to bones and help to facilitate movement, but they are not part of the backbone itself.
Yes, there are two small bones located in each cheek, called the zygomatic bones. They help form the structure of the cheeks and contribute to the shape of the face.
The palatine bones form the roof of the mouth.
Vertebrae
Vertebrae are the bones that form the backbone.
spine
One of the bones of the backbone is known as a vertebra. The plural is vertebrae.
Of course it does. Although, as in all vertebrates, the backbone is not a single bone, but a set of vertebrae, small bones linked together, so that the overall backbone will bend, while still protecting the spinal nerve.
if your wondering about back bones, dragonflies do not have them...they have exo-sceletons. Its like scales.
The kiwi is a bird and has a spine (backbone).
Yes, in the group of animals called the "vertebrates" (ie those animals with backbones), the backbone comprises many small bones (called vertebrae) that are articulated together to form the "spine".
vertebrae
No. Earthworms have no bones.
Clams have no bones, including backbone's. No backbone= invertebrate.
No bones at all, backbone or otherwise. They have an exoskeleton (shell)
They are invertebrates, so, no they don't have a backbone. In fact, they don't have any bones at all. They do have the largest brain of any invertebrate, however.