I answered a similar question to this a little while ago. See the related link to Wikipedia - for a picture of a complete snake skeleton.
Yes they do !
Yes they do ! See related link for a picture !
Yes they do ! See the related link to Wikipedia - for a picture of a complete snake skeleton.
No. A snake has a solid skeleton made from bones (in the same way our skeleton is made)
Snakes DO have a skeleton - they have aproximately 200 pairs of ribs along a flexible spine, attached to each other by muscles. See the picture in the top-left of the link I have provided.
Because it has a skeleton !
Snakes have an endoskeleton. Endo means inside and the skeleton of the snake is located inside the snake. Unlike crabs, or lobsters who have an exoskeleton, exoskeleton meaning outside. -hope this helped, :')
A snake's skeleton consists of the skull, vertebral column, ribs, and a pair of pelvic girdle bones known as vestigial remnants of hind limbs. It lacks limbs and a breastbone, which allows for the snake's elongated and flexible body structure.
Sorry, "Show" is not a picture of a brown snake .
It depends where the picture is and what type of picture.
The smallest animal skeleton in the world is believed to be the Barbados threadsnake (Leptotyphlops carlae), which is a type of snake. The skeleton of this tiny snake measures about 10-15 mm in length.
A snake's skeleton is internal and made of bones, while a fish's skeleton is primarily made of cartilage. Additionally, fish skeletons typically have two main sections: the backbone and the skull, while snake skeletons are more elongated and flexible to aid in their slithering movement.