All Access Pass - 3 FREE Months!
Institutional email required, no credit card necessary.
Skull - Lateral View
Pterion. Where the temporal, sphenoid, parietal, and frontal bones meet. It overlies the middle meningeal artery; thus, injury to the pterion is a common cause of intracranial epidural hematoma.

Skull - Lateral View

Start 3-Month Free Access!
No institutional email? Start your 1 week free trial, now!
Cranial bones
  • Enclose and protect the brain
Frontal bone
  • Comprises the forehead and the superior portion of the eye orbit
Parietal bone
  • Comprises the superior portion of the lateral skull
Sphenoid bone
  • Only small portion visible in lateral view
  • Gives rise to pterygoid processes
Temporal bone
  • Forms inferior boundary of lateral skull
  • Squamous portion is area inferior to squamous suture
  • Tympanic portion surrounds the external auditory meatus
  • External auditory meatus is the external opening of the ear
  • Mastoid process is the large bony projection near the occipital bone
  • Styloid process is a long, pointy projection
  • Mandibular fossa is a depressed area of the temporal bone that articulates with the mandible to form the temporomandibular joint
Occipital bone
  • Comprises posterior and inferior portion of cranium
Facial bones
  • Form the face and protect the entrances to the oral and nasal cavities.
Zygomatic
  • Contributes to the lateral eye orbits and cheeks
Nasal
  • Forms the bony component of the external nose
Maxilla
  • Contributes to the medial eye orbit, cheeks, and upper jaw
  • Anterior nasal spine is the projection of the maxillae that contributes to the inferior border of the opening of the nasal cavity.
Ethmoid
  • Contributes to medial eye orbit
Lacrimal
  • Contributes to medial eye orbit
  • Fossa for the lacrimal sac, through which tears pass from the eye to the nasal cavity. This connection explains why your nose runs when you cry.
Mandible
  • Bone of the lower jaw; it houses the lower teeth.
  • Condyle (aka, head) articulates with the mandibular fossa of the temporal bone posteriorly
  • Coronoid process provides an attachment site for temporalis, a powerful muscle of the jaw.
  • Mandibular notch lies between condyle and coronoid process
  • Ramus is the vertical portion
  • Body is anterior and lateral base
  • Angle lies between body and ramus, posteriorly
  • Mental protuberance, which forms the chin
Four major sutures:
  • Sutures are the immoveable joints between the skull bones.
Coronal suture
  • Lies between the frontal bone, anteriorly, and the parietal bones, posteriorly;
Sagittal suture
  • Lies between the right and left parietal bones;
Squamous suture
  • Lies between the temporal and parietal bones.
Lambdoid suture
  • Lies between the parietal and occipital bones.
Sutural bones (formerly called Wormian bones)
  • Small, irregularly shaped bones that form between the major skull bones.
Pterion
  • Where the temporal, sphenoid, parietal, and frontal bones meet
  • Overlies the middle meningeal artery; thus, injury to the pterion is a common cause of intracranial epidural hematoma.
Additional Features:
Paranasal sinuses
  • Spaces within the frontal, ethmoid, sphenoid, and maxilla; they are continuous with the nasal cavity (and are addressed in detail with the respiratory system).
Zygomatic arch
  • The zygomatic process, which is a projection of the temporal bone
  • The temporal process, which is a projection of the zygomatic bone
Photos