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Overview of the Skull01:08

Overview of the Skull

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The cranium (skull) is the skeletal structure of the head that supports the face and protects the brain. It is subdivided into the facial bones and the brain case, or cranial vault. The facial bones underlie the facial structures, form the nasal cavity, enclose the eyeballs, and support the teeth of the upper and lower jaws.
The cranial vault surrounds and protects the brain and houses the middle and inner ear structures. This cavity is bounded superiorly by the rounded top of the skull, which...
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Cranial Bones: Lateral View01:27

Cranial Bones: Lateral View

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The lateral view of the cranium is dominated by temporal, sphenoid, and ethmoid bones.
The temporal bone forms the lower lateral side of the skull. The temporal bone is subdivided into several regions. The flattened upper portion is the squamous portion of the temporal bone. Below this area and projecting anteriorly is the zygomatic process of the temporal bone, which forms the posterior portion of the zygomatic arch. Posteriorly is the mastoid portion of the temporal bone. Projecting...
2.3K
Cranial Bones: Superior and Posterior View01:14

Cranial Bones: Superior and Posterior View

2.3K
The superior view of the cranium shows the frontal and paired parietal bones.
The frontal bone is the single bone that forms the forehead. At its anterior midline, between the eyebrows, there is a slight depression called the glabella. The frontal bone also forms the supraorbital margin of the orbit. Near the middle of this margin is the supraorbital foramen, the opening that provides passage for a sensory nerve to the forehead. The frontal bone is thickened just above each supraorbital margin,...
2.3K
Anatomy of the Brain: Major Regions01:20

Anatomy of the Brain: Major Regions

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The brain is the most complex organ in the human body. It consists of four main parts: the cerebrum, diencephalon, cerebellum, and brainstem.
The cerebrum is the largest section of the brain and divides into left and right hemispheres, separated by a deep fissure. The cerebral outer layer of grey matter — the cerebral cortex — comprises elevations called gyri and shallow groves called sulci. The inner portion of white matter includes long nerve fibers known as axons, which connect...
4.8K
Sutures of the Skull01:22

Sutures of the Skull

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The human skull is composed of several bones that come together to protect the brain and support the structures of the face. The junctions where these bones meet are called sutures.
Sutures are immobile joints between adjacent bones of the skull. The narrow gap between the bones is filled with dense, fibrous connective tissue that unites the bones. The long sutures located between the skull bones are not straight but instead follow irregular, tightly twisting paths. These twisting lines tightly...
6.9K
Anatomy of the Brain: Ventricles01:18

Anatomy of the Brain: Ventricles

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There are hollow fluid-filled cavities known as ventricles deep inside the human brain. There are two lateral ventricles, one in each cerebral hemisphere, and each has three different projections — the anterior, inferior, and posterior horns visible from the lateral side. A thin membrane called the septum pellucidum separates the two lateral ventricles. The slender third ventricle in the diencephalon is connected to each lateral ventricle via a channel called the interventricular foramen.
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Related Experiment Video

Updated: Jul 15, 2025

Analysis of Craniomaxillofacial Malformations in Mice Using Three-dimensional Microcomputed Tomography
02:42

Analysis of Craniomaxillofacial Malformations in Mice Using Three-dimensional Microcomputed Tomography

Published on: January 17, 2025

337

Endocranial volumes and human evolution.

Ian Tattersall1

  • 1Anthropology, American Museum of Natural History, New York, NY, 10014, USA.

F1000Research
|September 25, 2023
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Human brain evolution was not a consistent trend; brain size increased episodically and independently in different Homo lineages. Modern human brain shrinkage suggests a departure from this pattern, not its culmination.

Keywords:
brain expansioncognitionendocranial volumesevolutionhomininhuman

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Area of Science:

  • Paleoanthropology
  • Human Evolution
  • Neuroscience

Background:

  • Hominin brain enlargement is often cited as a hallmark of human evolution.
  • Endocranial volume increased fourfold over seven million years, with later hominids generally having larger brains than earlier ones.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To critically examine the trend of hominin brain enlargement.
  • To investigate the drivers and patterns of brain size changes throughout human evolution.

Main Methods:

  • Analysis of hominin endocranial volume data over evolutionary timescales.
  • Comparative study of brain size trends across different hominin lineages and environments.

Main Results:

  • The apparent trend of brain enlargement was episodic and irregular, not continuous.
  • Brain volume increase occurred independently in at least three separate lineages of the genus Homo.
  • Recent brain shrinkage in Homo sapiens indicates a departure from the overall enlargement trend.

Conclusions:

  • The drivers of hominin brain enlargement likely involved broad environmental and geographical stimuli, not solely internal social factors.
  • Modern human cognition, associated with symbolic processing and language, emerged during a period of brain size reduction, signifying a divergence from prior evolutionary trends.