yes
The Dorsal Fin is located on the "back" of a fish. Where the spine is.
A dorsal Stripe is a dark brown/black stripe that goes straight down the back of a horse. Duns have them, But usually not paint duns.
The axial skeleton consists of the skull, spine, ribs, and sternum. In contrast, the appendicular skeleton includes the other bones.
The structure that attaches the ribs to the sternum is called the costal cartilage. It is a strip of hyaline cartilage that connects the bony rib to the sternum, allowing for flexibility and movement during breathing.
There are typically seven pairs of ribs that directly connect to the sternum, forming the rib cage. These are known as true ribs.
yes
dorsal means being behind in position of so yes it is dorsal to the sternum
yes
L6
no
No, the sternum is NOT the same thing as vertebrae. The sternum is the breastbone. Vertebra are in the spine.
: Vertebrae are posterior (or dorsal) to the sternum and medial to the kidneys.
The spine.
spine and sternum
Dorsal is the back , along the spine, i.e., a dorsal fin on a fish, a person laying on their back is said to be in a dorsal recumbant position.
A vertebral column or spine.
superior, in anatomical terms means closer to the top of the body, and inferior means closer to the bottom of the body. eg, your neck is superior to your pelvis. anterior means towards the front of the body, posterior towards the back. eg, your sternum is anterior of your scapular. so, 'is your spine superior to your sternum' is not correct. this actually mixes the terminology of superior/inferior and anterior/posterior. your spine cannot be 'higher' than your sternum, it can however be posterior to your sternum. Hope this helps!