CHAP. iv.J HEARING. 185 



the Fallopian canal carrying the seventh or facial nerve (Fig. 166 

 VII.) is a protuberance marking the position of the swollen ends 



FIG. 168. FRONTAL (TRANSVERSE VERTICAL) SECTION THROUGH THE TYMPANUM. 

 (LEFT EAR.) (Schwalbe.) 



The figure, partly diagrammatic, is magnified twice, and shews the front part of the 

 tympanum as seen from behind ; the incus has been removed, the articular sur- 

 face on the head of the malleus being indicated. 



mt. The membraua tympani. inf. membrana flaccida. mbr. haudle of the malleus. 

 p. b. short process of the malleus. 



Ig. e. external ligament, ly.s. the superior ligament of the malleus. 



TT. The bony projection from which the tendon of the tensor tympani passes to 

 the malleus. /'. o. the fenestra ovalis. v. the front part of the vestibule, c. the 

 beginning of the first (basal) turn of the cochlea. 



or ampulla? of two of the semicircular canals, namely those known 

 as the horizontal and superior. 



The distance across the tympanum between the beginning of 

 the chain of ossicles at the point of the handle of the malleus 

 and its end at the fenestra ovalis is very short, much shorter 

 than the length of the chain itself ; the greater part of the chain, 

 including the bodies and processes of, that is to say nearly the 

 whole of, the malleus and incus, owing to the peculiar form and 

 articulation of the ossicles, lies above a line drawn from the point 

 of the handle of the malleus to the fenestra ovalis. Cf. Figs. 167, 

 168. We must now turn to the details of the manner in which 

 the ossicles are attached to the membrana tympani, to each other, 

 and to the fenestra ovalis. 



813. The membrana tympani (Fig. 169) irregularly elliptical 

 in form with the long axis vertical is placed obliquely (Figs. 162, 

 168 m. t.), at the inner end of the external meatus. Nearly the 

 whole of the circumference of the membrane is fixed in a groove 

 of the ring-shaped bone, the annulus tympanicus. At the extreme 

 top the ring is wanting ; and the portion of the membrane thus 

 attached, not to the ring but to the bone above, being less tense 

 than the rest of the membrane, and indeed thrown into folds, is 

 distinguished as the membrana flaccida (Fig. 169 m. /.). The 



