The three (3) small bones in your ears.
Because your jaw is closely connected to your ears and your jaw moves when you swallow. That is also how you wiggle your ears.
no, if you stop wearing the retainer the teeth will move back, your jaw bone dosent change!
You can hold in your breath,and you can open up your mouth and move your jaw till it pops. I hope it works!
Because your upper jaw is part of your skull which is connected to your spine and your lower jaw is connected to your upper jaw by a hinge type joint that allows you to move your lower jaw so that we can eat. So therefore we cannot move our upper jaw because that would require moving our head which would move our lower jaw too.
No. It is part of your skull so it doesn't move like your lower jaw. Your lower jaw moves because it is a separate bone attached to the tendons and muscles that move it.
The main symptoms of whiplash are neck and back aches, headaches, shoulder pain, dizziness, ringing in the ears, and arm and jaw pains. There are less common symptoms in the most severe cases. These include depression and anger.
Yes. The platypus has ears, and an acute sense of hearing. Platypuses have no external earlobes, so in that sense they have invisible ears. They have external openings to the ear which are located either side of the base of the jaw.
To move your jaw
No, crocodiles do not move their upper jaw; it is fixed in place. Instead, they primarily move their lower jaw to open and close their mouths. This anatomical structure allows them to exert a powerful bite, as the upper jaw serves as a stable platform while the lower jaw does the movement.
Yes, the human middle ear is connected to the jaw through the Eustachian tube, which helps equalize pressure between the middle ear and the external environment. Changes in jaw position or function can sometimes impact ear health and function.
jaw