incus
the cochlea contains bone
the cochlea contains bone
The cochlea receives sound vibrations from the middle ear via the oval window, which is connected to the stapes bone. The stapes bone vibrates against the oval window, creating fluid motion within the cochlea that stimulates the hair cells responsible for hearing.
The cochlea is not a bone. It is a fluid filled tube in the ear that has tiny hairs. When a vibration, or sound, travels through the cochlea, the hairs move, which triggers nerves connected to the base of each hair to send a signal to the brain, allowing us to perceive sounds. However, there are two tiny bones in the ear which transmit vibrations from the eardrum to the cochlea. These bones are referred to as the hammer, the anvil and the stirrup.
its the cochlea I thought the stapes was the smallest bone in the human body located in the ear.
The inner ear or the cochlea
Muscle and bone are connected by tendons, whereas bone and bone are connected by ligaments.
well, you got your: foot bone, connected to your leg bone, connected to your hip bone, connected to your chest bone, connected to your arm bone, connected to your hand bone, 'dem bones, 'dem bones 'dem dry bones!
The stapes, the smallest bone in the human body, transmits sound vibrations from the middle ear to the cochlea in the inner ear. It functions to amplify and transfer sound waves to the fluid-filled cochlea.
The cochlea is located in the inner ear, in contact with the latter part of the 3 small bone structures that constitute the middle ear (the stirrup, hammer and anvil.)
The lyrics were, "Your leg bone connected to your knee bone".
The head bone's connected to the neck bone...