The process of a baby's membranes and cartilage becoming bone.|The tough, fibrous tissue that forms the outermost covering of bone.|The tissue that lines the medullary cavity.|Pertaining to the formation of blood cells.|The smooth, rubbery, blue-white connective tissue that acts as a shock absorber between bones.|The curved, fibrous cartilage found in some joints.|The shaft of a long bone.|The wider ends of long bones.|An opening in a bone through which blood vessels, nerves, and ligaments pass.|A normal projection on the surface of a bone that most commonly serves as an attachment for a muscle or tendon.|The place of union between two or more bones.|These are flexible soft spots on a newborn's skull that facilitate the passage of the infant through the birth canal.|Bands of fibrous tissue that form joints by connecting one bone to another bone or by joining a bone to cartilage.|A fibrous sac that acts as a cushion to ease movement in areas that are subject to friction.|The portion of the skull that encloses and protects the brain.|The only movable bone of the skull.|A flat, dagger-shaped bone located in the middle of the chest.|The bony structure that forms the upper portion of the sternum.|A slender bone that connects the manubrium of the sternum to the scapula.|The shoulder blade.|An extension of the scapula that forms the high point of the shoulder.|The bone of the upper arm.|The smaller and shorter bone in the forearm.|The larger and longer bone the forearm.|The bones that form the wrist.|The five bones that form the palms of the hand.|The 14 bones of the fingers. The bones of the toes are also known as this.|The posterior portion of a vertebrae.|The slightly curved triangular-shaped bone near the base of the spine that forms the lower portion of the back.|This forms the end of the spine and is made of four small vertebrae that are fused together.