Tooth - online puzzles

Kendall and Logan online puzzle
88Kendall and Logansolved 12 times
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Anna Gornostaj online puzzle
24Anna Gornostajsolved 11 times
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closeup photo of person jigsaw puzzle online
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James Arthur jigsaw puzzle online
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Vilde Lien Hellerud online puzzle
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Wiki Bugajska-Kosyniuk online puzzle
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The Lodge online puzzle
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Billy (Harrison Wittmeyer) online puzzle
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Bartłomiej Majewski & Sonia Kulewicz online puzzle
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Hello Caracola. jigsaw puzzle online
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Julian & Brooke online puzzle
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Hot nick wild online puzzle
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Lobito FERO. online puzzle
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First tooth jigsaw puzzle online
54First toothsolved 11 times
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Muffinart jigsaw puzzle online
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Winnie the Bubbles jigsaw puzzle online
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GARFIELD AN online puzzle
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Benio and Rysio jigsaw puzzle online
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treypuzzle jigsaw puzzle online
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my colleague online puzzle
25my colleaguesolved 10 times
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Noora Amalie Satre jigsaw puzzle online
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Ludmila Ferro online puzzle
25Ludmila Ferrosolved 10 times
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TEST online jigsaw puzzle online
30TEST onlinesolved 10 times
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Dante Albidone jigsaw puzzle online
80Dante Albidonesolved 10 times
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Ula Dobrzańska jigsaw puzzle online
4Ula Dobrzańskasolved 10 times
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Stupid idiot online puzzle
300Stupid idiotsolved 10 times
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I'll disassemble my thoughts thinking about you online puzzle
160I'll disassemble my thoughts thinking about yousolved 10 times
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tooth anatomy online puzzle
42tooth anatomysolved 10 times
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The Grinch online puzzle
35The Grinchsolved 10 times
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Diego B. L. Esteves and Lorena Barker Esteves jigsaw puzzle online
88Diego B. L. Esteves and Lorena Barker Estevessolved 8 times
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g is for girl jigsaw puzzle online
35g is for girlsolved 6 times
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m is for muffin online puzzle
35m is for muffinsolved 1 time
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Online puzzle Tooth

Tooth

A tooth (PL: teeth) is a hard, calcified structure found in the jaws (or mouths) of many vertebrates and used to break down food. Some animals, particularly carnivores and omnivores, also use teeth to help with capturing or wounding prey, tearing food, for defensive purposes, to intimidate other animals often including their own, or to carry prey or their young. The roots of teeth are covered by gums. Teeth are not made of bone, but rather of multiple tissues of varying density and hardness that originate from the outermost embryonic germ layer, the ectoderm.

The general structure of teeth is similar across the vertebrates, although there is considerable variation in their form and position. The teeth of mammals have deep roots, and this pattern is also found in some fish, and in crocodilians. In most teleost fish, however, the teeth are attached to the outer surface of the bone, while in lizards they are attached to the inner surface of the jaw by one side. In cartilaginous fish, such as sharks, the teeth are attached by tough ligaments to the hoops of cartilage that form the jaw.Monophyodonts are animals that develop only one set of teeth, while diphyodonts grow an early set of deciduous teeth and a later set of permanent or "adult" teeth. Polyphyodonts grow many sets of teeth. For example, sharks, grow a new set of teeth every two weeks to replace worn teeth. Most extant mammals including humans are diphyodonts, but there are exceptions including elephants, kangaroos, and manatees, all of which are polyphyodonts.

Rodent incisors grow and wear away continually through gnawing, which helps maintain relatively constant length. The industry of the beaver is due in part to this qualification. Many rodents such as voles and guinea pigs, but not mice, as well as leporidae like rabbits, have continuously growing molars in addition to incisors. Also, tusks (in tusked mammals) grow almost throughout life.Teeth are not always attached to the jaw, as they are in mammals. In many reptiles and fish, teeth are attached to the palate or to the floor of the mouth, forming additional rows inside those on the jaws proper. Some teleosts even have teeth in the pharynx. While not true teeth in the usual sense, the dermal denticles of sharks are almost identical in structure and are likely to have the same evolutionary origin. Indeed, teeth appear to have first evolved in sharks, and are not found in the more primitive jawless fish – while lampreys do have tooth-like structures on the tongue, these are in fact, composed of keratin, not of dentine or enamel, and bear no relationship to true teeth. Though "modern" teeth-like structures with dentine and enamel have been found in late conodonts, they are now supposed to have evolved independently of later vertebrates' teeth.Living amphibians typically have small teeth, or none at all, since they commonly feed only on soft foods. In reptiles, teeth are generally simple and conical in shape, although there is some variation between species, most notably the venom-injecting fangs of snakes. The pattern of incisors, canines, premolars and molars is found only in mammals, and to varying extents, in their evolutionary ancestors. The numbers of these types of teeth vary greatly between species; zoologists use a standardised dental formula to describe the precise pattern in any given group.