If you are talking about the structure just underneath the interior division of the nose, it's called the columella.
From anterior to posterior- the cartilage of septum, the perpendicular plate of ethmoid, and the vomer
deviated septum
Your heart and your nose
There are two muscles that divide the chambers of the heart. The right and left ventricles are divided by the interventricular septum and the right and left atria are divided by the interatrial septum.
The thing at the top eats everything below it, the thing below that eats everything below it and so on and so forth
The ear or septum.
It is called the interventricular septum.
The Nasal Septum
one side pumps oxygen into the blood and the other side pumps the blood out of the heart and through the body, so basically a little door like thing separates the to sides that do different things. also they are on different sides of your body.the door only opens one way to prevent the cycle going in reverse, or blood not completing the cycle.
the septum divides the teo ventricles of the heart.
septum
The Atrial septum The wall between the two atriums is called the septum. Septum Cardiac Septum Atrial septum, containing the foramen ovale. Actually its called the interatrial septum...
Interventricular septum
septum of the heart divides heart into right and left, that portion of the septum between right and left atria is called (interatrial) septum, while the portion of septum between right and left ventricles is called (interventricular) septum.
Injudicious cauterization of both sides of the septum causes a perforated septum when death of nose tissue occurs.
A septum ring is nothing more than a captive bead ring in a septum piercing.
A perforated septum is not serious.