The formation of bone from a cartilaginous model is termed endochondral ossification. This process involves the gradual replacement of cartilage with bone tissue, primarily occurring during the development of long bones in the body. It plays a crucial role in the growth and development of the skeletal system during childhood and adolescence.
A humerus bone is a long bone that is formed through a process called endochondral ossification. This process involves the transformation of a cartilaginous model into bone tissue through the deposition of minerals and the formation of bone cells. The humerus bone develops in the upper arm region of the body during embryonic and fetal development.
You have a primary cartilaginous joint between epiphysis and diaphysis. There is a plate of cartilage between the two. That make it possible for the bone to grow in length. This plate of cartilage is replaced by the bone tissue as the growth ceases.
No, it has a skeleton of bone.
benign outgrowth of cartilaginous tissue on a bone
Cartilaginous fish, also known as elasmobranchi, have skeletons made of cartilage rather than bone. Bony fish, also known as teleosts, have skeletons made of bone.
The skeleton is originally cartilaginous during fetal development. Over time, the cartilage is replaced by bone in a process called endochondral ossification, where bone tissue gradually forms and replaces the cartilage framework.
There is no bone termed "privatia" in the English language.
it develops in the diaphysis in long bones
osteomalacia
Chondrichthyes or cartilaginous fish(have cartililage instead of bone
Long bone growth in length occurs at the growth plate, also known as the epiphyseal plate. This is a cartilaginous area at the ends of long bones where new bone tissue is formed, leading to longitudinal bone growth.
epiphysis