BIOL 1117 Lecture Notes - Lecture 16: Paranasal Sinuses, Foramen Magnum, Shoulder Girdle

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Axial skeleton - forms central supporting axis of the body. Skull, auditory ossicles, vertebral column, and thoracic cage (ribs and sternum) Appendicular skeleton - includes bones of upper limb and pectoral girdle, and bones of the lower limb and pelvic girdle. Do not need to know hyoid bone. More bones at birth but some bones fuse as humans become adults. Projections/extensions - crest (narrow ridge), line (elongated ridge), processes (bony prominence) Ex. spine of bone (narrow process) and trochanter (massive process unique to femur) Depressions - fossa (shallow basin/shell) and sulcus (slightly deeper groove; blood vessel, nerve, or tendon can pass over sulcus) Passages - canal (passageway), sinus (air-filled space in bone), and foramen (hole into bone) Articular surfaces - head (expanded end of bone), facet (flat articular surface), and condyle (rounded knob) = articulation with other bone. Skull - most complex part of skeleton; contains several major cavities. 22 bones joined together by sutures = stationary joints.

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