The pockets of air are being compressed making a popping noise.
Vertebrae are the individual bones that make up the spine and provide support and protection for the spinal cord. There are typically 33 vertebrae in the human spine, divided into five regions: cervical, thoracic, lumbar, sacral, and coccygeal. Each vertebra has a specific shape and function that allows the spine to move and bend while protecting the spinal cord from injury.
Attachment of the ligaments that hold the vertebrae together and the muscles that move them
The scapula is divided by the spine into unequal portions called the supraspinous fossa and infraspinous fossa. The spine is a bony ridge that runs diagonally across the flat surface of the scapula.
The coccyx is in the sacral section of the spine.
No.The cervical spine is in the neck and is above the lumbar spine, which is in the low back. Because we reference things from anatomical position, which is standing upright, and because the term "inferior" is used to denote things that are below, that statement would be incorrect. Therefore, we could correctly say the cervical spine is superior, or rostral, to the lumbar spine. We could also say that the lumbar spine is inferior, or caudal, to the cervical spine.
what happens when your neck cracks everytime you move it
in your class, identify which bones move you do a spine roll
The spine
yes. The interneuron in the spine send a message to the motor neuron in the arm which then allows it to move the muscle.
spine
You use the fire and move your mouse over the cracks.
Tectonic plates.
True
Your spine is made up of tine bones, they all move together. Think of a snake, all they have is a spine.XD
Of course tigers have spines! All mammals have spines and a tiger is a mammal.
yes, snakes are INvertabrates cause they have no spine, that is how they slither. an invertabrate has no spine so this makes a snake an invertabrate because,if a snake had a spine it wouldn't be able to move it's body very flexably like it does
air is being displaced between the pockets of each vertbrae along the spine causing a popping or cracking type noise.