Yes they do. All cooks know that the neck and backbone of a chicken makes a great soup or stock for gravy and in some cultures the neck and backbone of a chicken is used as a main meal. Picking the meat from these roasted chicken parts is part of the ambiance of the backcountry tradition.
Yes, lots of them
There from chickens
chickens bones
Chickens and humans have similar bones, such as a skull, backbone, ribs, and limbs. However, chickens also have additional bones such as a wishbone (furcula) and a keel bone to support their wings and flight muscles.
Chicken bones have less density than cow bones because they are smaller and lighter in weight due to the size difference between chickens and cows. Additionally, chicken bones have a higher proportion of air spaces compared to cow bones, which further reduces their density.
The pneumatic bones are where the air sacs, part of the respiratory system, connect with some of the longer bones. These bones are hollow to help with flight.
Yes vinegar takes the calcium out of other bones besides chicken bones.
yes they do because dinosaurs had bones and chickens pigs cows horses have bones too so the answer is yes.
yes a chicken bone does have marrow
hopefully it will bend, it works with chickens.
it makes their bones fallout and they go all floppy
Chickens have 120 bones. Several of them are extremely small and hard to see. They have less bones than humans, who have 206 bones.