Ethmoid Bone
The "ethmoid bone" is located in front of the sphenoid bone. It consists
of two masses, one on each side of the nasal cavity, which are joined
horizontally by thin "cribriform plates." These plates form part of the
roof of the nasal cavity, and nerves (ethmoidal cells) associated with the
sense of smell pass through tiny openings in them. Portions of the ethmoid
bone also form sections of the cranial floor, eye sockets, and nasal
cavity walls. A "perpendicular plate" projects downward in the middle from
the cribriform plates to form the bulk of the nasal septum. Delicate
scroll-shaped plates called "superior" and "middle nasal conchae" project
inward from the sides of the ethmoid bone toward the perpendicular plate.
These bones, which are called the "turbinate bones," support mucous
membranes that line the nasal cavity.