tympanic lip of limb of spiral lamina - définition. Qu'est-ce que tympanic lip of limb of spiral lamina
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Qu'est-ce (qui) est tympanic lip of limb of spiral lamina - définition

Spiral lamina; Lamina spiralis ossea

Tympanic part of the temporal bone         
The tympanic part of the temporal bone is a curved plate of bone lying below the squamous part of the temporal bone, in front of the mastoid process, and surrounding the external part of the ear canal.
Osseous spiral lamina         
The osseous spiral lamina is a bony shelf or ledge which projects from the modiolus into the interior of the canal, and, like the canal, takes two-and-three-quarter turns around the modiolus.
Lip plate         
  • [[Raoni Metuktire]], a [[Kayapo]] man, speaking at the Brazilian Commission on Human Rights and Participatory Legislation
  • Contemporary Mursi woman showing pierced lower lip without a lip plate
  • Dixon, George]] (1789): ''Voyage autour du monde''
PLATE IN A MURSI WOMAN'S MOUTH
Lip plates; Lip disc; Lip discs; Lip disk; Lip plug; Lip Plug; Lip Disc; Lip Plate; Lip plugs
The lip plate, also known as a lip plug, lip disc, or mouth plate is a form of body modification. Increasingly large discs (usually circular, and made from clay or wood) are inserted into a pierced hole in either the upper or lower lip, or both, thereby stretching it.

Wikipédia

Osseous spiral lamina

The osseous spiral lamina is a bony shelf or ledge which projects from the modiolus into the interior of the canal, and, like the canal, takes two-and-three-quarter turns around the modiolus.

It reaches about half-way toward the outer wall of the tube, and partially divides its cavity into two passages or scalae, of which the upper is named the scala vestibuli, while the lower is termed the scala tympani.

Near the summit of the cochlea the lamina ends in a hook-shaped process, the hamulus laminae spiralis; this assists in forming the boundary of a small opening, the helicotrema, through which the two scalae communicate with each other.

From the spiral canal of the modiolus numerous canals pass outward through the osseous spiral lamina as far as its free edge.

In the lower part of the first turn a second bony lamina, the secondary spiral lamina, projects inward from the outer wall of the bony tube; it does not, however, reach the primary osseous spiral lamina, so that if viewed from the vestibule a narrow fissure, the vestibule fissure, is seen between them.