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4 comments
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September 18, 2012 at 7:41 am
Rachel Burke
Amazing. Would have been interesting to put hands on them. And the tongue is a big muscle in the mouth. I remember after some mouth work feeling as if the roof of my mouth had completely changed shape – but it was my tongue that had changed; released impact from a collision with a telepragh pole down the bottom of a hill while on rollar skates aged 8, discharged energy caught in it, and I remember I used to end up biting my tongue on one side when I was a kid, after that. Rachel
Date: Mon, 17 Sep 2012 22:40:31 +0000 To: rachburke@hotmail.com
September 18, 2012 at 10:36 am
Steve Lane (@SteveLaneHealth)
wow, that jaw’s amazing… the ridges on the parietals look like the temporal lines to me http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Temporal_line
September 18, 2012 at 11:41 am
Steve Haines
Thanks, I have corrected. I got the masseter and temporalis confused.
September 19, 2012 at 8:32 pm
Lynne McKay
It’s just another landscape language. As we become aware of the massive languages with which the body tells its story, and become even less stuck in western anatomical expression the wider the possibilities of being heard are. How does the master seaman tell by the language of the waves and the sea, how to set his sails, how does the desert dwellers listen and understand their world. The secret? Until we know we don’t know, it’s all there until we see it