The hammer-oyster is a bivalve shell fish. Malleus vulgaris, found in the Indian Ocean. It resembles the pearl-oyster when young, but becomes more hammer-like as it gets older by the lengthening of its ears. Research Hammer-oyster
The auditory ossicles (the incus, malleus, and stapes) are the bones of the middle ear. The incus is shaped like an anvil. The malleus is shaped like a hammer and the stapes is shaped like a stirrup. They are the smallest bones in the human body. The three bones are connected to each other by hinges and act as mechanical levers to carry and push the vibrations of the ear drum forward to the flexible membrane of the oval window. When sound waves cause the tympanic membrane to vibrate, the vibrations move the malleus, which in turn moves the incus. The incus moves the stapes which is attached to the oval window. The sound is then passed to the inner ear. The leverage of the middle ear bones increases the intensity of the sound wave by five decibels before the wave is funneled toward the oval window. Research Auditory Ossicles
The ear is the organ used for hearing. It converts sound into electrical impulses that are fed to the brain. The external ear is composed of the auricle (the pinna), and the auditory canal (the meatus auditorius externus). The Pinna or auricle surrounds the entrance to the auditory canal. It consists of cartilage covered by skin, with small muscles connecting it to the scalp. At the base of the ear is a fleshy lobe. The meatus auditorius is a canal about three centimeters long in the adult, partly bony and partly cartilaginous, leading from the pinna of the ear to the drum. The lining cells secrete the waxy substance found in the canal. In young children the canal is much shorter. The ear drum (tympanic membrane) is a thin oval-shaped membrane, inserted into a groove around the auditory canal. Normally it is white, glistening and somewhat transparent, so that some of the structures of the middle ear are partly visible when viewed through an auroscope. It separates the auditory canal from the middle ear.
The Tympanum or middle ear is a cavity within the temporal bone. It contains several important structures, including three small bones which connect the drum with the internal ear; they are the malleus or hammer, the incus or anvil, and the stapes or stirrupbone. They transmit the vibrations of sound waves to the inner ear. The Eustachian Tube is a channel of communication between the tympanum and the upper part of the pharynx. It admits air from the throat to the tympanum and so maintains an equal pressure on both sides of the drum. The Labyrinth or internal ear is a series of chambers through the petrous bone, comprising the vestibule, a three-cornered cavity within the tympanum; the semicircular canals communicating with the vestibule; and the cochlea, which makes two and a half turns around an axis called the modiolus. The human ear is capable of detecting sounds in the frequency range 20 hz to 20 khz, approximately. Research Ear
The skull is one of the principle groups of bones in the human anatomy. The skull consists of twenty-six bones: eight bones form the skull, which houses the brain and ear ossicles, plus fourteen facial bones, which form the front of the face, jaw, nose, orbits, and the roof of the mouth, three more bones make up the inner ear ossicles, and one more, the hyoid bone, is in the neck and is attached to the temporal bone by ligaments and anchors the tongue. The skull also contains a dental arcade of teeth, which are technically not bones, though they do share some of the compositional characteristics of bonetissue. Children may grow twenty deciduousteeth, which will eventually fall out and be replaced by the permanent teeth.
The bones of the skull include the frontal bone, the occipital bone, two parietal bones, and two temporal bones. The lower rearmost part of each temporal bone is called the mastoid process, but because it is separated from the temporal bone, proper, by a suture, it is often considered a separate bone. The sphenoid bone forms the central base of the skull and spans the skull from side to side, the greater wings forming side plates of the skull. The sections of the ethmoid bone are positioned between the orbits, forming the walls and roof of the nasal cavity, while the three middle ear ossicles (stapes, malleus, and incus) are located within the temporal bones on each side of the skull. The U-shaped hyoid bone is found in the neck, and is attached by ligaments to the temporal bones. In the face, the two maxillary bones form much of the orbits, nose, upper jaw and roof of the mouth, while the zygomatic bones form the cheeks. The lachrymal bones are located on the inner sides of the orbits and are attached to the ethmoid bone and maxillary bones. Within the nasal cavity, the vomer is located in the low center and forms the thin flat bone of the nasalseptum, while two inferior urbinates form the lower sides of the cavity and two palate bones form the floor of the nasal cavity as well as the roof of the mouth.
The mandible is the only movable part of the skull, forming the lower jaw and mounting the teeth. The bones of the skull, with the exception of the mandible, are held together by very thin sutures, or seams, in which the periosteum of the individual bones interweave with each other, and are cemented by a fibrous, connective tissue. In the newborn, these sutures are not yet developed, with the bones being attached by cartilage which ossifies over time as the bones of the skull fuse together. The most evident external sutures of the skull include the coronal suture, joining the frontal bone and parietal bone, the sagittal suture, joining the parietal bones to each other, the lambdoid suture, joining the occipital and parietal bones, the squamous suture, joining the temporal and sphenoid bones to the parietal bone on each side of the skull.
The pterion is the short segment of the suture joining the squamous and parietal bones. The bones of the skull also feature a number of sinuses and foramina. Four pairs of sinuses flank the nasal cavity. Two are found in the maxillary bone, and are called maxillary sinuses. The sphenoid bone forms two paranasal sinuses called the sphenoids, and the ethmoid bone forms the two paranasal sinuses called ethmoids. Additionally, the frontal sinuses are located in the frontal bone just behind the roof of each orbit. The foramen magnum is a large, round opening in the base of the skull which admits the spinal cord, while at the base of each temporal bone is the external auditory meatus, which serve as the auditory canals. Just above each orbit in the frontal bone is a small notch or hole, called a supraorbital foramen, and just below each orbit, in the maxillary bone, is an infraorbital foramen. Two more openings, one on each side of the skull, can be found in the frontal processes of the zygomatic bones, and are called zygomatofacial foramina.
On each side of the mandible, just below the lower canines, are the mental foramina. These facial foramina serve to admit blood vessels and nerves through and into the bone. The teeth are mounted in the maxillary bone and the mandible, and are brought together for chewing by the hinge-like motion of the mandible. An average adult will have thirty-two teeth, evenly arrayed on the maxilla and mandible. Research Skull
The tympanic membrane (ear drum) is a thin semitransparent, oval-shaped membrane, set in the auditory canal. It has a stiff rim and a concave outer surface. It is quite small and is often called the 'ear drum' because it resembles the skin stretched across a drum. Sounds in the earcanal cause the tympanic membrane to vibrate with complex patterns. It is attached to the malleus, the first of the middle ear's three bones. The tympanic membrane's vibrations move the malleus, which in turn moves the incus. The incus then moves the stapes which is attached to the oval window. Research Tympanic Membrane
 
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