No, it is not. The strongest bone of the body is the femur (upper leg, thigh bone).
There are three auditory ossicles in the middle ear. The smallest is the stapes or stirrup. These are not bones of strength, so one is not stronger than the others. They all amplify and transmit sound vibrations from the tympanic membrane to the oval window.
Inner ear.
Ossicles
The stapes is the smallest bone. It is located in the inner ear.
The smallest human bone is the stapes (aka stirrup) which is one of the three auditory ossicles of the middle ear.
in your inner ear there is a bone which then vibrates and sends that to the brain, after this process, you can hear stuff (unless you can't hear).
in your inner ear there is a bone which then vibrates and sends that to the brain, after this process, you can hear stuff (unless you can't hear).
Probably the skull. Or something in the ear. From Wikipedia: "The inner ear is hollow, embedded in the temporal bone, the densest bone of the body."
stepis in inner ear
The answer to that question is twofold, the strongest boned in the body is the femur, but the bones least likely to break are the bones of the inner ear. The femur is the strongest bone because of its size, because it is encased in some of the largest musculature in the body, and because it is very dense as compared to other bones.
The oval window is part of the middle ear but in theory, yes it does separate the middle ear from the inner ear.
The smallest bone in the human body is the stapes bone in the ear, also known as the stirrup bone. It is located in the middle ear and is responsible for transmitting sound vibrations to the inner ear.