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Two sets of bones comprise the skull: cranial bones and facial bones. The cranial bones have two functions. First of all, they protect and enclose the brain. Second, they provide the site for which the head muscles can attach. The facial bonesskull pic.jpg (4907 bytes) provide the framework for the face and mouth. All bones comprising the skull are attached to each other via immovable joints, except for the mandible which is attached to the skull via a freely movable joint. There are eight cranial bones which make up the cranium. These bones are remarkable thin and can be compared to an eggshell in the way that they are self-bracing. The forehead is formed by the frontal bone which also forms the upper half of the eye sockets. Two parietal bones comprise the sides of the skull. Named so because they are above the parietal area of the brain, the parietal bones form the bulk of the cranium. Temporal bones lie inferior to the parietal bones on both sides of the skull. The occipital bone, also named for the part of the brain it covers, forms the posterior of the skull. The sphenoid bone encloses the rest of the cranial cavity. It lies behind the eye sockets anterior to the temporal bones and posterior to the frontal bone.

face.gif (448 bytes) The face is comprised of roughly seven bones. The sides of the eye sockets are formed by the Zygomatic bones. The rest of the sockets are formed by the Maxilla, which is two bones that are fused together. The upper teeth are attached to the inferior of the Maxilla. The jaw is formed by the mandible where the lower teeth reside on the superior surface.

 

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