in the skull
The skull contains what we call the eye socket or orbit. There are seven bones that articulate to form the orbit: frontal bone, lacrimal bone, ethmoid bone, zygomatic bone, maxillary bone, palatine bone and the sphenoid bone.
His eye's are blue. It is easy to find in video's
Ligaments connect bones together, so a skeleton is basically held together by ligaments, which are tough, non-expandable and non-elastic. Tendons connect muscles to bones, and these are slightly more elastic although they're definitely not supposed to be stretched.
Eye Scream
1) hollow bones in their skeleton 2)??
None. Actually the eye is held in place with the help of the skull.
The skeleton is held together by ligaments, which are tough bands of tissue that connect bones to other bones. Ligaments provide stability and strength to joints, allowing for movement while also preventing bones from moving too far or out of place.
In my personal opinion; a skeleton hand holding the heart represents death with love. The hand could represent death or the ultimate demise of love
Nope. Your eye sockets are empty areas in your skull, which is a part of your skeleton, but the eyeballs themselves are not. Has to be a bone to be part of the skeleton--your nose isn't even a bone! Nor your ears (the outer part you can see.) Those are cartilage! You do, however, have tiny bones inside your inner ear that help you hear, and they ARE part of your skeleton!
It was held at the Utah Olympic Park. Luge, bobsleigh, skeleton, Nordic Combined, and the Ski jumping were all held here in Slat Lake City, Utah, USA, in 2002.
No. Skeleton was competed at the 1928 and 1948 Winter Games, both held in St. Moritz, Switzerland. Other than that, it was not considered an Olympic sport until the 2002 Games in Salt Lake City.
A photon.