Bone marrow.
Bone marrow is where blood cells are created. Only long bones (with the "hole" in the center) have bone marrow in them. So leg bones and arm bones make blood cells, but rib bones or skull bones do not. So those short, solid, irregular-shaped bones do not create blood cells.
Red blood cells are produced in the bone marrow of flat bones like the pelvis, sternum, and skull. These bones contain stem cells that differentiate into red blood cells through a process called hematopoiesis.
Bones do have blood vessels running through them in a soft tissue called bone marrow, which produces blood cells. However, the hard outer layer of bones, called compact bone, is not supplied with blood vessels on its surface. The periosteum, a thin membrane surrounding bones, is responsible for supplying blood to the outer layer of bones.
Yes, bones do have blood in them. The blood within bones helps deliver oxygen and nutrients to bone cells, remove waste products, and support the growth and repair of bone tissue.
Red blood cells, in order to store more hemoglobin to carry oxygen, don't have a nucleus that can make repairs. So red blood cells only last, on average, 120 days. Because they constantly need to be reproduced and your bones, believe it or not, are very well vascularized, it seems like a pretty good place to store the marrow to make more red blood cells.
The tissue in the center of bones that makes blood cells is called bone marrow. It is a soft, spongy tissue that produces red blood cells, white blood cells, and platelets through a process called hematopoiesis.
The muscle tissue bones that make blood are called the Cancellous bone.
Blood Cells.
spears out of animal bones
They don't. Bones and blood cells aren't connected. They are just near each other, and serve totally different purposes. Blood cells make up your blood, and bones are just there so you won't be a pancake.
You can make a dinosaur project by going into your backyard and looking for dinosaur bones. When you find the dinosaur bones you can determine what kind of bones they are as a project.
All the blood cells are produced in the bone marrow But not all bones do that. Bones that do make blood cells include bigger longer bones, like the humerus and femur.
Bones are made up of minerals, mainly calcium hydroxyapatite.
bone marrow
Femer and Humerous
Red and white blood cells are both made in the marrow of the long bones.
"Boner" is not a bone. A "boner" is slang for erection. Erections are caused by blood vessels in the penis filling with blood. No bones are involved.
Red blood cells are produced in the bone marrow of flat bones like the pelvis, sternum, and skull. These bones contain stem cells that differentiate into red blood cells through a process called hematopoiesis.