206, although infants will have more - these extra bones will then fuse together as they grow.
You do not really 'lose' bones but some fuse together. Particularly the bones in the cranium.
because as you grow up bones fuse together and become stronger
No, the number of bones in the human body remains the same as we grow older. A baby is born with about 270 bones, but many of these fuse together as the body matures, resulting in the adult skeleton of around 206 bones.
There are about 320 bones in a baby's body, but as they grow, some fuse together. An adult body has 206 bones.
No. When a baby is born it has about 300 bones. As they grow, some of those bones fuse together and it is an adult that has about 206 bones.
Babies have more bones than adults because as they grow up, some of the bones fuse together to form one bone ...
still 206 but a bay has 300 and as they grow up it turns into 206 because they fuse together.
A baby may have up to 300 bones in their body, but as you grow some bones join together, so when you are an adult you have 206 bones in total
The average adult has 206 bones in their bodies. Children have approximately 270 bones, many of which fuse together as they grow.
Babies have more bones than adults but the only way this is, is because numerous bones the babies have are not yet fused together. For example, the skull of a baby is several different bones, after a while they fuse together to form the complete skull.
A newborn baby has around 300 bones.A baby has 300 bones at birth. As they grow older the small bones grow together unil finaly as as an adult there are 206.A baby has about 300 bones at birth. As they grow small bones grow together and as an adult you have 206 bones.