yes
Toads lack an outer ear, or a tympanum to transmit vibrations to the middle ear. Instead, they use the fenestra ovalis to transmit vibrations of the stapes to the endolympatic system, where the cells detect the vibrations through the lymph.
The Tympanum is the eardrum.
yes, the frogs ear can also be call the tympanum
The 'tympanum' is the same thing as the human eardrum-- it is used for hearing! Frogs and toads have this membrane on either side of their heads for bi-directional hearing.The frog's tympanum allows it to hear.The frog's tympanum allows it to hear.Relaying sound waves is the function of a frog's tympanum.Specifically, the term describes a structure which is located on the outside of some amphibians, insects and mammals. In frogs, it is found just behind the frog's eye. It works as a middleman in hearing since it transmits sound waves from the environment into the frog's protected, inner ear for processing.the ear is the typanium in the frogs.
The tympanum is an external hearing structure in frogs and toads, located just behind the eye. It does not actually process sound waves; it simply transmits them to the amphibian's inner ear, which is protected from water and other foreign objects.
The Romanesque tympanum often had the figure of Christ.
Tympanum
in your brain i think
tympanum.
Eardrum
Yes they do.
The intended effect of the viewer of the "Gislebertus' Last Judgment tympanum" was to humble the the viewer before the church.