Spongy Bone.
The small holes in the bone surface are called osteocytes and they are responsible for nutrient and waste exchange. They help in maintaining bone health by communicating with neighboring cells and facilitating repair and remodeling processes within the bone tissue.
Foramen
I'm full of holes, Flexible, and thin. I control what get out As well as what comes in. The answer is... cell membrane
Mottled bone in humans refers to a condition where the bones have a patchy or blotchy appearance when viewed on imaging studies like X-rays. This can be an indication of various underlying conditions such as osteoporosis, osteomalacia, or other metabolic bone diseases. It is important to consult a healthcare professional for proper evaluation and management.
Osteogenesis is the process of bone formation, where new bone tissue is created and developed. It involves the differentiation of osteoblasts, which are specialized cells responsible for building and mineralizing bone. Osteogenesis plays a crucial role in bone growth, repair, and remodeling throughout life.
Bone is a rigid, hard, porous solid organic material
Spongy bone has holes in it that make it strong, but compact bone doesn't have any holes in it.
There are 18 holes on a full golf course.
Pocket Full of Holes was created in 2006.
Colander
Sky Full of Holes was created on 2011-07-20.
The warden full name in holes is Linda walker
18 holes.
The small holes in the bone surface are called osteocytes and they are responsible for nutrient and waste exchange. They help in maintaining bone health by communicating with neighboring cells and facilitating repair and remodeling processes within the bone tissue.
You have two types of bone in each bone. You have compact bone and spongy bone. Compact bone is the hard stuff that protects the yellow marrow (this stores fat) in the long part of your bone. Spongy bone is still hard, but it is a bit more forgiving because it is not solid bone. It has holes in it (thus the name). These holes are filled with your red marrow (these make red blood cells).
To drill holes in bone or wood.
Collander