Inner Ear

Internal ear, likewise called maze of the ear, some portion of the ear that contains organs of the faculties of hearing and harmony. The hard maze, a pit in the worldly bone, is isolated into three areas: the vestibule, the crescent channels, and the cochlea. Inside the hard maze is a membranous maze, which is additionally partitioned into three sections: the crescent conduits; two saclike structures, the saccule and utricle, situated in the vestibule; and the cochlear channel, which is the main piece of the inward ear associated with hearing. The cochlear channel frames a rack over the cochlea isolating it into two areas, the scala vestibuli and the scala tympani. The whole internal ear is washed in a padding liquid, called the endolymph when it exists in the membranous maze and the perilymph when it isolates the hard and membranous mazes.    

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