The cranial capacity is a measure of the volume of a skull (cranium) while a centimetre cube is a measure of volume - of any object - the ignition chambers of a petrol engine, a bottle of soda, a box.
Cranial nerve 5 is the trigeminal nerve.
This is straight from my text book. So here it goes... The 12 pairs of cranial nerves are indicated by Roman numerals (I-XII) from anterior to poster (front to back). Hope this was helpful =D
The trigeminal nerve is CN V (cranial nerve V)
7-15 mm Hg; at 20-25 mm Hg
There is one optic nerve in the eye. It is also known as cranial nerve II.
the brain is in the cranial
Maybe, "Cranial volume" or "Cranial capacity".
I think the cranial capacity is a good indicator of the body because it helps use to think about what we do.
The cranial capacity of Homo idaltu is estimated to be around 1,450 cubic centimeters, which is similar to that of early Homo sapiens.
it is a remnant ov the bursa of Luschka, the cranial part of the notochorda
1300 cc for females 1600 cc for males
Yes - Neanderthals.
A midsaggital plane will show the continuity between the spinal and cranial cavities.
sutures
cranial nerves are nerves which arise from different parts of brain that are paired and 12 pair and 24 in number. peripheral nerves are neurons that exists out side brain and spinalcord and make up peripheral nerve system.
The average cranial capacity of Homo habilis is estimated to be around 600-750 cubic centimeters. This is smaller compared to modern humans, whose cranial capacity averages around 1300-1500 cubic centimeters.
The cranial nerve responsible for hearing and equilibrium is vestibulocochlear nerve (CN VIII). It originates from between the pons and medulla.