Core Gateways
Source:
Dean, Tamara. Network+ Guide to Networks. Boston: Course Technology, 2005. 578-78.
The backbone is also known as the spinal column or spine, and the individual bones that make up the backbone are called vertebrae.
The backbone is made of tiny bones, called vertebrae, that make up one large backbone, or vertebral column.
The individual components that make up the backbone are called vertebrae. The backbone in general is more commonly called the spinal column in the literature.
Your spine is made up of vertebra. Tarsals are in your feet!
Sugar and phosphate are the parts that make up the DNA backbone.
False. Not all animal organisms have a backbone; those that do are classified as vertebrates, while those without a backbone are called invertebrates. Invertebrates make up the majority of animal species, including groups like insects, mollusks, and cnidarians. Therefore, having a backbone is not a requirement for classification as an animal.
An invertebrate has no backbone. This differentiates them from vertebrates, which do have a backbone or spinal column. Invertebrates make up the vast majority of animal species on Earth.
The eagle has a backbone or spine so it is a vertebrate. Vertebrae are the bones which make a backbone.
A human is a vertebrate because they have a backbone made of vertebrae.
You make no scense xoxo
Internet
The backbone of DNA and RNA is made up of alternating sugar (deoxyribose in DNA and ribose in RNA) and phosphate molecules. This sugar-phosphate backbone provides structural support for the nitrogenous bases that make up the genetic information in DNA and RNA.