Where the coronal and sagittal sutures meet is a membranous interval known as the anterior fontanelle, while the posterior fontanelle is at the juncture of the sagittal with the lambdoidal suture. These fontanelles—so called from the pulsations of the brain that can be seen in them—close after birth either by the extension of the surrounding bones or by the development in them of small bones known as Wormian bones, the posterior one closing within a few months, the anterior by the end of the second year. In rickets, however, the anterior fontanelle remains open a long time, sometimes into the fourth year.
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Fig. 15.—Cranium at birth, showing sutures and fontanelles.
The frontal bone, as its name implies, forms the fore part of the head or forehead. It joins the parietal bones above and the temporal bones on either side. At the lower edge are the supra-orbital arches, each with a supra-orbital notch or foramen on its inner margin for the passage of the supra-orbital vessels and nerve, the nerve most affected in neuralgia. Just above the arches on either side are the superciliary ridges, behind which, between the two tables of the skull, lie the frontal sinuses. On the inner surface the frontal sulcus for the longitudinal sinus runs along the median line.
The parietal bones are the side bones of the skull. They meet each other in the sagittal suture at the median