The carpals articulate distally with the ulna. The carpals are also known as the wrist bones.
radius and ulna
radius and ulna
The lower extremity of the radius actually has two bones which it articulates with. The carpal and the ulna.
You have the humerus above. The radius above and below. The ulna does not take part in wrist joint formation. It comes in contact with triquetrum bone in extreme adduction of wrist joint.
At the distal end: the carpels in the hand at the head of the ulna and the radius at the ulna notch of radius. At the proximal end: the trochlea of the humerus at the trochlear notch and coronoid process of the ulna and the head of the radius at the radial notch of the ulna.
'Carpus' is the medical term for 'wrist' and consists of approximately 8 (depending on the species) carpal bones. The carpal bones articulate with the radius and ulna proximally and the metacarpal bones distally.
The ulna and the radius articulate with the distal humerus at the elbow joint. The ulna forms the primary articulation, while the head of the radius articulates with a small depression on the side of the ulna known as the radial notch.
The elbow joint is formed by the articulation of three bones: the humerus (upper arm bone), the radius (one of the two lower arm bones), and the ulna (the other lower arm bone). The humerus fits into a shallow socket on the ulna, allowing for bending and straightening of the arm. The radius bone also plays a role in this joint by rotating around the ulna, allowing for movements such as supination and pronation.
The Ulna is the name of one of the bones in the foreman, it is in itself a bone.
the ulna is one of two bones in your forearm
the radius and ulna
The human arm is made up of three bones, the humerus (upper arm) and the ulna and radius, both of which make up your lower forearm. so: -humerus -ulna -radius