8.So when your cute little ossicle bones start sending pressure waves up the inner fluid, they cause certain sections of basilar membrane to vibrate back and forth.
9.And over time, that body plan gradually became even more specialized, with a new adaptation: bits of bone embedded in the leathery shell called ossicles.
10.And it does this using the auditory ossicles — a trio of the smallest, and most awesomely named bones in the human body: the malleus, incus, and stapes, commonly known as the hammer, anvil, and stirrup.
11.If you're a medicine, nursing, or physiotherapy student and want a way to drastically reduce the frustration involved with packing ridiculous amounts of anatomy information into the thing between your two auditory ossicles, you should definitely check out Kenhub.