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  2. Temporal bone - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Temporal_bone

    A glomus jugulare tumor is a tumor of the part of the temporal bone in the skull that involves the middle and inner ear structures. This tumor can affect the ear, upper neck, base of the skull, and the surrounding blood vessels and nerves. A glomus jugulare tumor grows in the temporal bone of the skull, in an area called the jugular foramen.

  3. Tympanic part of the temporal bone - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tympanic_part_of_the...

    The tympanic part of the temporal bone is a curved plate of bone lying below the squamous part of the temporal bone, in front of the mastoid process, and surrounding the external part of the ear canal. It originates as a separate bone (tympanic bone), which in some mammals stays separate through life.

  4. Temple (anatomy) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Temple_(anatomy)

    The temporal muscle covers this area and is used during mastication. Cladistics classify land vertebrates based on the presence of an upper hole , a lower hole , both , or neither in the cover of dermal bone that formerly covered the temporalis muscle , whose origin is the temple and whose insertion is the jaw .

  5. Endocranium - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Endocranium

    The endocranium in mammals is much reduced in relative size and number of bones compared to the condition in the ancestral land vertebrates, though the occipital bone occur as one or more stout bony elements in several mammal groups. The occipital bone is also found as several bony elements in birds and reptiles, while the skull of modern ...

  6. Petrous part of the temporal bone - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Petrous_part_of_the...

    In 2015 it was found that the petrous bone has remarkably well-preserved DNA. [2] A 2017 study [3] comparing DNA from different skeletal sites concluded that "The inner part of petrous bones and the cementum layer in teeth roots are currently recognized as the best substrates for (ancient DNA) research ... Both substrates display significantly ...

  7. Temporomandibular joint - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Temporomandibular_joint

    The disc is composed of dense fibrocartilagenous tissue that is positioned between the head of the mandibular condyle and the mandibular fossa of the temporal bone. The temporomandibular joints are one of the few synovial joints in the human body with an articular disc, another being the sternoclavicular joint. The disc divides each joint into ...

  8. Butchered animal bones indicate earliest human presence in ...

    www.aol.com/news/butchered-animal-bones-indicate...

    The bones were from a large armored plant-eating mammal named Neosclerocalyptus, part of a group called glyptodonts that inhabited the Americas for more than 30 million years before going extinct ...

  9. Neurocranium - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neurocranium

    In humans, the neurocranium is usually considered to include the following eight bones: 1 ethmoid bone; 1 frontal bone [5] 1 occipital bone; 2 parietal bones; 1 sphenoid bone; 2 temporal bones; The ossicles (three on each side) are usually not included as bones of the neurocranium. [6] There may variably also be extra sutural bones present.