When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Foramen magnum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Foramen_magnum

    With the foramen magnum being position anterior in the cranium, the body of bipedal mammals is given a different center of gravity compared to quadrupedal mammals. The anterior foramen magnum shifts the weight of the body more to the mammals' pelvis and femur, present in some primates, like great apes.

  3. Tympanic part of the temporal bone - Wikipedia

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

    The central portion of the tympanic part is thin, as it gives rise to the bony inner two-thirds of the ear canal, and in 5 - 20% of skulls the lower surface is perforated by a hole, the foramen of Huschke [1] that opens onto the temporomandibular joint due to incomplete fusion of the anterior and posterior prominences during development.

  4. Taung Child - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Taung_Child

    The forehead of the chimpanzee receded to form a heavy browridge and a jutting jaw; the Taung Child's forehead recedes but leaves no browridge. Its foramen magnum, a void in the cranium, where the spinal cord is continuous with the brain, is beneath the cranium so the creature must have stood upright. [33] This is an indication of bipedal ...

  5. Evolution of mammalian auditory ossicles - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Evolution_of_mammalian...

    The evolution of the mammalian middle ear appears to have occurred in two steps. A partial middle ear formed by the departure of postdentary bones from the dentary, and happened independently in the ancestors of monotremes and therians. The second step was the transition to a definite mammalian middle ear, and evolved independently at least ...

  6. Orthograde posture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Orthograde_posture

    The skull was an indicator of orthograde posture because of the location and orientation of the foramen magnum. The foramen magnum is the space in the skull that acts as the bridge to the central nervous system from the spinal cord to the brain. For animals with "pronograde posture, the foramen magnum is dorsally oriented, whereas in humans it ...

  7. Skull - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Skull

    The base of the cranium is formed from a ring of bones surrounding the foramen magnum and a median bone lying further forward; these are homologous with the occipital bone and parts of the sphenoid in mammals. Finally, the lower jaw is composed of multiple bones, only the most anterior of which (the dentary) is homologous with the mammalian ...

  8. Internal auditory meatus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Internal_auditory_meatus

    The cochlear and vestibular branches of cranial nerve VIII separate according to this schema and terminate in the inner ear. The facial nerve continues traveling through the facial canal, eventually exiting the skull at the stylomastoid foramen. A common mnemonic to remember the anterior quadrants of the inner ear is: "seven up, coke down ...

  9. Hypoglossal nerve - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hypoglossal_nerve

    CN XII is a nerve with a sole motor function. The nerve arises from the hypoglossal nucleus in the medulla [ 1 ] [ 2 ] as a number of small rootlets, pass through the hypoglossal canal and down through the neck, and eventually passes up again over the tongue muscles it supplies into the tongue.