once a cavity is formed in the teeth the teeth doesn't have the capacity to repair itself .but we can fill the cavity artificially
All of them. This is one of the features of some members of the macropod family, not just rock wallabies. They are grazing animals, and need to continuously regrow their molars. Kangaroos, however, do not regrow molars, but have their molars move forwards to replace those that fall out when worn down and unusable.
IF you are a child the second molar tooth will be replaced by a permanent tooth called the second premolar. HOWEVER IF what you lost is a permanent second molar , it will not be replaced, the loss is permanent as in the case of all permanent teeth whether they are molars premolars, canine or incisors.
The one essential difference is that Vulcans have only 28 teeth, as they lack one pair of back molars.
Your molars fall out at around when you are 9 - 12 years old and start coming out when you are around around age 12-13 year old. when you lose your baby molars they grow but when you lose your adult molars they do not grow back.
Starting from back to front on each side of your mouth you have (counting wisdom teeth): three molars, two premolars, one canine, and two incisors.
No, it is one part of the human bady that does not grow but the human eyeball does not grow either.
You do lose your canine teeth along with other baby teeth. They generally fall out in the order they came in, with the center incisor teeth first, followed by the first baby molars, then the canines, and the second molars. They grow back.
Yes, it is possible for a tooth to grow three times but it is VERY RARE! But when it does grow, it is called supernumerary teeth (supernumerary is one word!).
noone can go black hole as the name suggest it is a hole which is black so how any one can go ad com back...
depends on wat type of plant you want to grow
put an eyebrow pencil to grow back fast
Yes, Might have dif. Times for it but at one point they do all grow back.