Humerus
Doing some drawing fixes. I found this one humerus. Now including the common variation of the Septal Aperture, a hole in the olecranon fossa/radial and coronoid processes.
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Humerus
Doing some drawing fixes. I found this one humerus. Now including the common variation of the Septal Aperture, a hole in the olecranon fossa/radial and coronoid processes.
Phalanges of the Toes
Toesies!
Metatarsals
Your midfoot to your toes. Prone to stress fractures.
Cuboid Tarsal
Cause your pinky toe needs to rest somewhere (articulates with fourth and fifth metatarsals)
Cunieforms
With the Navicular and the Cuboid, these form the start of your foot (coming from the ankle)
Navicular
For any of you wondering why I'm going so hard on the feet, it's because there are very few decent references for labelled foot bones with multiple views. I'd like to make sure there's a source for them.
Calcaneus
The other part of what you break. It's such a Heel!
Talus
When you break your ankle, this is part of what you break.
Fibula
You know how the Tibia was the load-bearing lower leg bone. Yeah, the Fibula is not that. It's more like scaffolding. The leg's very own flying buttress if you will. It's very thin and comparatively easily broken. On many animals, it's actually fused to the Tibia.
Tibia
If you look at it from the front, it kind of has a T-shape. This load bearing lower leg bone is a major blood producer.
Patella
What mobsters break when they Kneecap you.
The Femur
Without it, you won't have a leg to stand on. Also, it produces blood and the head will not be easily destroyed by a woodchipper or burning. Don't try it. However, rodents absolutely love to gnaw on it.
The tail end of the thing.
They make up your lower back and are the most likely to suffer from compression related injuries.
Thoracic Vertebrae. These make up your lower back and, depending on whether they are closer to your neck or lower back they may have a more cervical or lumbar-esque appearance.
Cervical Vertebrae are closest to the head and typically form your neck.
Your first two vertebrae. I still think they look like a guy wearing shoulder pads.