Yes, they have big body's so they can support the weight of the neck. They need the neck to reach high branches to reach vegetation.
No. They're heads are just stuck on their bodies.
That's what those long tails were for. Also, a dinosaur's neck is a fine bit of natural engineering, with bone and muscle well balanced to reduce weight. Finally, bulky bodies support the long necks.
You need necks so that you can support your head and so it wont just fall off your shoulders. ;)
The sauropods were a group of herbivorous dinosaurs with enormous bodies and long necks and tails.
Yes, cats have necks. The purpose of a cat's neck in their anatomy is to support their head and allow for flexibility in movement, helping them to groom themselves, hunt, and communicate with body language.
Besides the usual twisting of ankles, legs, wrists, necks, etc. that are associated with most sports; the physical body contact (impacts) of heavy bodies conducted at relatively high speeds (running speeds) can cause the majority of injuries.
Somewhat the small blunt bumps all over them are only on their backs and necks.
giraffes legs themselves measure to 6 feet tall , their bodies are another 3, and their necks about 8 . Do the math..
human beings so they eat us by biting our necks and then our skull and then you try to get it off you but it's to heavy
Humans have necks to support the weight of their head, allowing for flexibility and movement. The neck also houses important structures such as the spine, blood vessels, and nerves that help facilitate communication between the brain and the rest of the body.
generally feed necks break when either the loader is too heavy and too much side to side motion is applied or when the feed neck is plastic and is hit hard on something. Generally the best feed necks are metal and clamping.
Pigeons are in the family Columbidae and it includes 310 species. They have stout bodies with short necks, and they have short slenders bills with fleshy ceres.