The intertubercular sulcus is found at the front of your shoulder. To locate it, put your first three fingers in a row and walk them from the area between your breast and collarbone towards your shoulder. Just as you get them to the front of the "ball" part of your shoulder, you will feel a "drop off" and a sense that there's a tubular structure you can wiggle left and right. That is your intertubercular sulcus. It's also known as the bicipital groove.
The greater tubercle, lesser tubercle, and intertubercular sulcus are located near the proximal end of the humerus.
The intertubercular bicipital groove is a sulcus formed by the greater and lesser tubercles of the humerus. The tendon of the long head of the biceps muscle passes through this groove and is held in place by a transverse ligament.
on the intertubercular groove of the humerus just lateral to pectoralis major
The answer is sulcus.
Sulci is the plural of sulcus
Promachoteuthis sulcus was created in 2007.
The Sullen Sulcus was created in 2002.
The groove found between the greater and lesser tubercles of the humerus is called the intertubercular groove, or the bicipital groove.
The depression or groove in the surface of the cerebral cortex is called a sulcus. Sulci are the shallow grooves, while deeper grooves are called fissures. They help to increase the surface area of the brain, allowing for more brain cells and more complex functions.
Interventricular Sulcus
Intertubercular groove of humerus
Yes, the frontal lobe is separated from the temporal lobe by the lateral sulcus (also known as the Sylvian fissure). This sulcus runs horizontally across the brain, dividing the frontal and temporal lobes.