Bones are living things. A group of cells referred to as osteoblasts, which are always churning out new bone, while a second set know as osteoclasts, destroys bone by gobbling it up.
bones are important to living things because it protects plants
All living things do not have bones. All vertebrates (including mammals) do. Substitutes for bones include exoskeletons (arthropods and insects) or cartilage (sharks and some other fish).
Almost all - are you looking for things with bones?
The correct spelling of the plural noun is skeletons (the bones of living things).
No. Living things such as insects have exoskeletons and no bones.
No, it is not a living thing because bones cannot grow and does not need air,food, water warmth to survive.Disagree with above. The skeleton of a LIVING animal is part of a living thing. Bones DO grow, and DO need food. When an animal dies, the skeleton also dies.
bones are living they grow gradually with bone marrow
water. sand shells rocks bones and lots of trash
not really, bones are not living cells they are made of calcium mostly and are not living cells, although inside of the bones contain bone marrow, which are living cells
Well the only non-living things in the Sahara desert are of course land based objects. For example, the sand, rocks, dirt. All of these are non-living because they cannot grow, use food, or drink water. In other words they cannot do things living creatures can. Also bones are non-living things in the Sahara
Bones are considered living tissue because they are composed of cells that are alive and capable of growth and maintenance. They are constantly undergoing remodeling to adapt to the body's needs and repair damage.
Blood cells, whether you believe it or not, are produced from the bones. Bones are living things, and act as storehouses. Because the minerals to create blood cells are directly in the bones, cell production is most efficient.