A living bone consists of three layers: the periosteum, or
outside skin of the bone; the hard compact bone; and the bone marrow. If we were
to cut a living bone in half, we would see that it contains various layers.
First is a layer of thin, whitish skin which is packed with nerves and blood
vessels and supplies the cells of which the hard bone below is built.
Next is a
dense, rigid bone called the compact bone. It is shaped like a cylinder and is
so hard that surgeons must use a saw to cut through it. It is honeycombed with
thousands of tiny holes and passageways, through which run nerves and blood
vessels that supply oxygen and nutrients to the bone. This dense layer supports
the weight of the body and is made up of mostly calcium and minerals, so that it
feels no pain. The "skin," however, is very sensitive, so that when a
bone is broken, injured nerve fibers run through the compact bone and send
messages which relay the pain signals to the brain.
If we cut though the compact
bone, we find that its cylinder surrounds and protects the spongy bone marrow
which contains a material much like gelatin. This marrow produces either red
blood cells (which carry oxygen), white blood cells (which fight infection), or
platelets (that help stop bleeding). These three bone layers work together with
nerve signals which speed back and forth and blood streams which move between
the layers. Thighbones are usually stronger, pound for pound, than reinforced
concrete.