A dog's spine typically has around 35 vertebrae, which are the bones that make up the backbone. Each vertebra is connected to the next by joints and cushioned by intervertebral discs. The spine is divided into different regions, including the cervical, thoracic, lumbar, sacral, and tail vertebrae.
A crocodile's spine is made up of a variable number of bones, typically between 50 to 70 vertebrae. These vertebrae are connected by ligaments and cartilage, providing flexibility and support for the crocodile's body.
There are ten.
The kiwi is a bird and has a spine (backbone).
Parietal bones, temporal bones, zygomatic bones, palatine bones, inferior nasal concha.
There are 122 bones in a dog's spine.
26 six bones
69
The carpal bones are connected to the radius bone through the radiocarpal joint, which is a synovial joint that allows for movement of the wrist. The radius bone articulates with the scaphoid and lunate carpal bones at the wrist.
The Spine is made up of many smaller bones, which is what allows flexing and movement of the spine. Please see the related links for a detailed picture of the bones that make up the spine.
Your "backbone" is actually a series of bones; the technical name is "spinal column", and it's a stack of bones called "vertebrae" connected by cartilage and muscles that allow it to bend and twist. At the bottom of the spine, the vertibrae connect to the pelvis, or "hip bones", which then connect to the thigh, the upper leg bones. The lowermost bone in the spine is the coccyx, or tailbone. If we had tails, that's where they would be connected.
The human backbone, or spine, is composed of 33 bones. It is divided into segments: the cervical spine, the thoracic spine, the lumbar spine, the sacrum, and the coccyx.