yes
There are 8 cranial bones in the human skull. They include the frontal bone, parietal bones, temporal bones, occipital bone, sphenoid bone, and ethmoid bone.
Cranial bones and other flat bones develop via intramembranous ossification, a process where bone tissue is formed directly from mesenchymal cells without a cartilage intermediate. Ossification centers form in the mesenchyme, and osteoblasts within these centers deposit bone matrix, which eventually becomes mineralized to form bone. This process results in the flat structure of the cranial and other flat bones.
Examples of flat bones in the human body include the skull bones, sternum (breastbone), scapulae (shoulder blades), and ribs. These bones provide extensive surface area for muscle attachment and protection for underlying organs.
The parietal bone is a flat bone because it is located in your skull
Frontal bone
Sphenoid Bone:(from Greek sphenoeides, meaning "wedgelike") wedge like bone, one of the eight Cranial Bones. There are fourteen Facial Bones...
The cranial vault is formed by the Frontal bone, pair of Temporal bones, pair of Parietal bones, Occipital bone, Sphenoid bone, and superior portion of the Ethmoid bone.
The Sphenoid (Sphenoidal Bone) this is why it is know as the keystone of the cranial floor *The sphenoid is not a facial bone, it is a cranial bone. There is no facial bone which 'articulates' with 'every other facial bone'. Articulation suggests jointed so sutures would make more sense & these sutures would be on all facial bones edges which knit them together
Where one cranial bone meets another is referred to as a suture line.
Sinuses, or air cavities.
Facial and cranial bone
temporal bone