The types of joints in the cranium are called sutures.
They include:
Coronal suture - between the frontal and parietal bones
Lambdoid suture - between the parietal, temporal and occipital bones
Occipitomastoid suture
Parietomastoid suture
Sphenofrontal suture
Sphenoparietal suture
Sphenosquamosal suture
Sphenozygomatic suture
Squamosal suture - between the parietal and the temporal bone
Zygomaticotemporal suture
Zygomaticofrontal suture
Frontal suture / Metopic suture - between the two frontal bones, prior to the fusion of the two into a single bone
Sagittal suture - along the midline, between parietal bones
Frontoethmoidal suture
Petrosquamous suture
Sphenoethmoidal suture
Sphenopetrosal suture
immovable
The cranium or joints in you pelvis
immovable
immovable
Examples of sutures as joints are found in the bone that make up the cranium which covers the brain. There are 22 bones that form the cranium. There are 11 sutures. The joint is slightly moveable and that gives some flexibility to the cranium. This type of joint is called a synarthrosis.
The cranium.
The immovable joints in the body are called synarthroses. They are found in the cranium, the sockets of the teeth, and the epiphyseal plates of the bones,.
The medical term for the joint between the bones of the cranium is "suture." Sutures are fibrous bands of tissue that connect the bones of the skull and allow for growth and flexibility during infancy.
Parietal bones, temporal bones, zygomatic bones, palatine bones, inferior nasal concha.
The cranium is connected to the vertebrae.
The skull is the another name for the cranium
Examples of immovable joints include the skull sutures in the cranium, which are connected by fibrous tissue that does not allow for movement. Examples of movable joints include the knee joint, which allows for flexion and extension, and the shoulder joint, which allows for a wide range of motion.