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Head

bones, arch, bone and lower

HEAD, in anatomy, the skull, or crani um. Part of the head consists of an os seous ovoidal capsule for the protection of the brain. The face proper consists of the upper and lower jaws. The skull in old age becomes composite like the sacrum in the adult. The margins, or sutures, of the cranial bones, 22 in num ber excluding the hyoid bone, correspond to the articular processes in the trunk. In youth the flat cranial bones are con nected by a double lamina of cartilage; notwithstanding the junction of the mar gins, they grow by the increase of one cartilage and the ossification of the other. Like the arch in the movable vertebra, we have the arch in the head; in the lower part there are bones phy siologically connected with the head bones of the neck. There are three seg ments in the head: (a) The posterior, beginning from the cervical vertebra below the occipital segment, consisting of a single bone, in reality four bones; a part of it lies in the base of the cra nium at the back of the face, but the greater part extends up the back of the cranium. It consists of a ring, lateral sides, and an arch. (b) The anterior, consisting of the frontal and ethmoid bones. The only vestige here of the ver tebral foramen is the foramen cmcum.

(c) The central segment; in the middle line below, and cut in two halves by the moesial plane, is the sphenoid bone, but along with it are two bones, the tem poral, attached to its outer portions or great wings, composing the basis of the arch completed by the two parietal bones. These segments are divided by the lamb doidal sutures and corona]. The head is divided into a base and a vault, or cal varium; the inner aspect is called the cerebral, the other the superficial, ex ternal, etc., aspect. The bone on the outside of the cranium is not so dense as it is on the inside, in accordance with a law of construction in all animal and vegetable bodies, a law of part, and a law of place. Some anatomists count four segments, the two temporal bones constituting the fourth. The vertebrate have a head homologous in its anatomy with that of man. That of the Annulosa is homologous in functions, but not in parts. The cephalopodous and gasterop odous mollusks have heads, the Conchif era, sometimes called Acephala, want them. Most animals of lower organiza tion than these are destitute of heads.