Skip to main content
Back

Skeletal System

Control buttons has been changed to "navigation" mode.
1/50
  • Diaphysis


    The shaft of a long bone. Made mostly of compact bone and surrounds the medullary cavity.

  • Epiphysis


    The rounded ends of a long bone. Contains mostly spongy bone and covered by cartilage, forms joints.

  • Medullary (or marrow) cavity


    Hollow space inside the diaphysis that contains bone marrow.

  • Epiphyseal Line/plate


    Growth plate made of hyaline cartilage where bone lengthening occurs. Becomes the epiphyseal line after growth stops.

  • Compact bone


    Dense, hard outer layer of bone that provides strength and support.

  • Spongy bone


    Lightweight, porous bone found at the ends of long bones and inside many bones. Contains trabeculae and marrow.

  • Osteon


    the fundamental structural unit of compact bone, consisting of concentric layers of bone tissue surrounding a central canal that contains blood vessels and nerves.

  • Interstitial Lamellae


    The remnants of old osteons located between complete osteons.

  • Concentric Lamellae


    Circular, ring-like layers that make up osteon, the main building block of compact bone.

  • Central Canal


    narrow, cerebrospinal fluid-filled channel that runs through the spinal cord, playing a crucial role in the circulation of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) and maintaining the health of the central nervous system.

  • Osteocytes


    star-shaped bone cells embedded in the mineralized matrix, residing in lacunae and connected through canaliculi to form a communication network.

  • Lacunae


    are small cavities within bone or cartilage that house cells such as osteocytes in bone and chondrocytes in cartilage.

  • Canaliculi


    tiny channels in bone tissue that connect bone cells, allowing them to communicate and share nutrients, which is essential for bone health.

  • Trabeculae


    small, beam-like structures that form a supportive, lattice-like network within certain tissues, especially spongy bone.

  • Periosteum


    a dense, fibrous membrane covering most bones, composed of an outer fibrous layer and an inner cellular layer, essential for bone growth, repair, and sensory perception.

  • Frontal Sinus


    are paired air-filled cavities located in the frontal bone above the eyes, triangle in shape.

  • Superior Temporal Line


    curved bony ridges on the parietal bone of the skull.

  • Foramen magnum


    large, oval-shaped opening located at the base of the skull, specifically in the occipital bone.

  • Occipital condyles


    oval-shaped structures located at the base of the skull, in occipital bone surrounding the foramen magnum and it's what connects the first vertebra to the skull.

  • Superior nuchal line


    is a bony ridge on the back of your skull, specifically on the occipital bone.

  • External occipital protuberance


    Located on the mid-line of the occipital bone. In the middle of the superior nuchal line.

  • External Acoustic Meatus (external auditory canal)


    name for the passageway that extends from the outer ear to the eardrum within the temporal bone of the skull.

  • Mastoid Process


    The bony nub or projection of the temporal bone, towards the bottom parallel to mandible.

  • Styloid Process


    Pointy bony projection from temporal bone that extends downward.

  • Stylomastoid foramen


    small, round opening located between the styloid and mastoid processes of the temporal bone

  • Mandibular fossa


    In temporal bone, in front of external acoustic meatus (earn canal), next to mandible in a C shape.

  • Zygomatic Process


    located in the temporal bone, maxilla, forms of the zygomatic arch (cheekbone) and part of eye socket.

  • Petrous part


    Section of temporal bone that sits at base of the skull, between sphenoid and occipital bones, near the ears.

  • Carotid canal


    Located in center of petrous part of the temporal bone.

  • Sphenoidal sinus


    paired air-filled cavity located in the body of the sphenoid bone, deep within the skull behind the upper nasal cavity.

  • Greater wings


    two large, curved, wing‑shaped extensions on either side of the sphenoid bone

  • Lesser wings


    Two thin, triangle plates of sphenoid bone in between the greater wings.

  • Sphenoidal bone


    In front of temporal and below frontal bone.

  • Stella turcica


    A saddle shaped depression located in sphenoid bone, housing the pituitary gland.

  • Superior orbital fissure


    Large, triangular shaped opening located at the apex of the orbit, between the greater and lesser wings of the sphenoid bone.

  • Optic canal


    A funnel-shaped canal located in the lesser wing of the sphenoid bone. Lies medial to the superior orbital fissure.

  • Foramen rotundum


    located in the anteromedial part of the greater wing of the sphenoid bone, posterior to the medial end of the superior orbital fissure and inferior to it at the base of the skull.

  • Foramen ovale


    oval-shaped opening in the greater wing of the sphenoid bone, posterolateral to the foramen rotundum and anteromedial to the foramen spinosum.

  • Foramen spinosum


    small, oval opening located in the greater wing of the sphenoid bone at the base of the skull. It is positioned posterolateral to the foramen ovale.

  • Perpendicular plate


    a thin, vertical bony structure that forms the upper part of the nasal septum, dividing the nasal cavity into two chambers.

  • Cribriform plate


    part of the ethmoid bone, located in the anterior cranial fossa at the roof of the nasal cavity, between the eyes, and beneath the frontal bone

  • Olfactory foramina


    located in the cribriform plate of the skull, specifically in the two depressions lateral to the crista galli.

  • Crista galli


    a thin, wedge-shaped bony structure that extends upward from the cribriform plate of the ethmoid bone

  • Superior nasal conchae


    a small, curved bony projection from the ethmoid bone that forms the roof of the superior nasal meatus

  • Middle nasal conchae


    curved bony plates projecting from the ethmoid bone into the nasal cavity.

  • Nasal bones


    a small, paired bone forming the bridge of the nose and protecting the nasal cavity.

  • Palatine process


    a medial projection of the maxilla that forms the anterior three-fourths of the hard palate and separates the oral and nasal cavities.

  • Maxillary sinus


    pyramid-shaped cavity within the maxilla, situated beneath the orbit and lateral to the nasal cavity

  • Alveolar process


    the part of the jawbone that contains the tooth sockets, supporting and anchoring the teeth through the periodontal ligament.

  • Temporal process


    a bony projection on the zygomatic bone that extends posteriorly to articulate with the zygomatic process of the temporal bone, forming the anterior portion of the zygomatic arch.