Yes, it is
They form in the middle ear
eardrum
in the temporal bones.
The function of the eardrum in the middle ear is to vibrate sound waves into the year. It transmits sound from the environment into the ossicles found in the middle ear.
outer and middle ear.
Pipe that leads to the Ear-drum and a Bonescalled Maleus, Incus, and Stapes.
The three smallest bones in the body can be found in your middle ear.
The inner, outer and middle. The outer ear is the bit stuck to the side of your head and the ear canal down to the ear drum. The middle ear is an air-filled cavity behind the ear drum, where the 3 smallest bones in the human body are found. The inner ear is made up of the hearing organ (the cochlea) and the organ responsible for sensing motion and gravity which helps us balance.
You have external ear, middle ear and the internal ear. You have the auricle and the ear canal is there in the external ear. Then you have a ear drum, that separates external ear from the middle ear. In the middle ear, you have three tiny bones. Eustachian canal is there in the middle ear. Then you have oval and round window to separate the middle ear from internal ear. In the internal ear, you have vestibulocochlear apparatus and the vestbulocochlear nerve is there.
Since there are NO bones in the inner ear, there are 206 bones that are not found there. The "ear bones" are the three auditory ossicles that are found in the middle ear. Their names are malleus/hammer, incus/anvil and stapes/stirrup.
The oval window is part of the middle ear but in theory, yes it does separate the middle ear from the inner ear.