Oesteocytes is the living cell of bone.
The process that increases bone length is called endochondral ossification, where cartilage is replaced by bone tissue, primarily occurring at the growth plates during childhood and adolescence. Bone diameter increases through a process called appositional growth, where new bone tissue is added to the outer surface of the bone by osteoblasts while osteoclasts resorb bone from the inner surface, maintaining overall bone strength and shape. Together, these processes enable bones to grow in both length and width throughout development.
Epiphyseal line is the junction between diaphysis (long part of the bone) and epiphysis (growing end of the bone). This is the region where the growth of bone takes place. Gradually as an individual approaches puberty, the epiphysis fuses with the bone and the growth stops.
I think that one way is to check the colour (if its grey-stone coloured-then its more likely to be a fossil), another way may be to see if it is buried in hard rock or not although I am not sure about this last method.
it is a bone
The answer is the letter R !!
The Bone Morrow
Yes, bone flutes are made of BONE, and stone flutes are made of STONE. They were both used during the Stone Age
can lime stone be consume for bone strength
Spongy bone is living.
In the Stone age, bone hooks were used for fishing.
It stays in your boby for five days. After one mouth it gets in your bone morrow
autologous
Yes, bone is living tissue. Bone is made up of living and non-living components. There are living cells (collagen, etc.) and non-living minerals (calcium, etc). It has a blood supply and innervation. It is made up of cells that grow and die. Bone can get infected. Bone can heal and be repaired.
tools
tools
No it's not. Technically, the stone is non-living, it is just combiination of various minerals and sediments that consolidated over the years, it's made of dead stuff! However, a stone can be an eco-system, many tiny organisms live and throve on it's surface, small bacteria to even moss, tiny insects and critters hide under the stone. So, though the stone is non-living, you could say that they very much support life.