Want this question answered?
Styloid process of the ulna & radius.The temporal bone, the radius bone, and the ulna bone.
Yes. Also, the radius and ulna have a styloid process.
Temporal Bone
In the skull, the temporal bone.
The bumps at the ankle are the malleoli (singular malleolus). The medial malleolus is formed by the tibia, and the lateral malleolus by the fibula. The medial wrist bump is formed by the styloid process of the ulna, and the lateral wrist bump by the styloid process of the radius.
The styloid process is a bony protuberance off of the temporal bone. During embryological development, the dorsal end of the second pharyngeal arch cartilage forms the stapes and the styloid process. It is the cartilaginous viscerocranium that is derived from the first two pharyngeal arches.
stylohyoid
Ligaments that support the hyoid bone are attached to the styloid process.
The muscle attached to the lateral supracondylar ridge is the "Brachioradialis" with an insertion point in styloid process of the radius.
The mastoid process. And the little piece of bone jutting out from the mastoid process is the styloid process.
That bone is called as mandible or jaw bone. You have a pointed process below the ear in bony skull, called as styloid process.
The styloid process is a slender pointed piece of bone just below the ear. It projects down and forward from the inferior surface of the temporal bone, and serves as an anchor point for several muscles associated with the tongue and larynx.