look at horse and hound article
Yes, a horse has a back bone.
The bone in a horse's leg that runs from the knee to the fetlock.
A bone chip occurs in horses when they either bang against something and a sliver of bone pops off the main bone or they are worked harder than their bodies can handle and a bone chip breaks off. The location of the bone chip and any type of surgical history will factor into whether the horse can be ridden or not. You should have the horse Radiographed (X-Rays) and checked by a equine Veterinarian to see if the horse is sound for any type of riding.
The third metacarpal bone of a horse is called the cannon bone or shin bone. The canon bone is the major support bone of body weight.
Not unless you're financially able to care for it
A:Yes, the bones in horses contain bone marrow. However you should not feed a horse bone marrow. A:Yes. All mammals have bone marrow, which is where their bodies manufacture blood cells.
The wing of a bat. The leg of a horse...
No.
The cannon bone of a horse's leg is affected when they get bucked shins.
A mature horse has 205 bones.
The horse patella is the large triangular bone located at the knee joint of a horse. It is equivalent to the kneecap in humans and plays a role in the horse's ability to flex and extend its leg while walking or running.
The bone in a horse's tail is called the Dock. It goes from the top of the tail, to about mid-tail or shorter.