Sutures
The Coronal suture attaches the frontal with the parietal.
The Squamous suture attaches the temporal with the parietal.
The Lambdoid suture attaches the parietal with the occipital.
The dura mater attaches to the inner surface of the skull.
The occipital bone is the bone at the back of the skull where the spinal cord attaches to the brain, moving up from there you have a parietal bone on each side and the inter-parietal bone between them
falx cerebrifalx cerebrifalx cerebelliFalx cerebrii
The temporalis muscle is named after the temporal bone of the skull to which it attaches. It originates from the temporal fossa on the side of the skull and is one of the muscles involved in chewing and closing the jaw.
No, a tendon attaches a muscle to bone. A ligament attaches a bone to another bone.
The skull is a bone. The skull protects the brain.
Ligament attaches bone to bone tendon attaches muscle to bone
which bone of the skull canmove
Ligaments.
the bone that protects the brain is the skull.
The cranial and facial bones
a ligament attaches bone to bone