It has six surfaces, of which the dorsal and a part of the laterals look into the cranial cavity. The cranial end articulates with the body of the presphenoid, and the caudal with the body of the occipital.
The dorsal surface is triangular, with one apex of the triangle truncated, elevated, and directed craniad. This elevation is the tuberculum sellæ (d). Just caudad of the middle the surface presents a rectangular elevation with rounded angles, the dorsum sellæ (e). The cranial end of the dorsum sellæ presents at each dorsolateral angle a very small smooth tubercle which represents one of the posterior clinoid processes of man. Between this elevation and the elevated cranial end of this surface there is a deep excavation, the sella turcica (f), in which in the natural state is lodged the hypophysis. Near the cranial end of the sella is a small foramen, probably nutrient. At the caudal end of the body a slight notch (g) separates it from the wing: this notch forms a part of the foramen lacerum. Against this notch fits the apex of the petrous bone, and from it a groove (carotid groove) is continued mediocraniad to the sella turcica.
The ventral surface ([Fig. 41], 3) is triangular, smooth, and nearly flat; it is marked by a median ridge which is the continuation craniad of the ridge on the ventral face of the basilar portion of the occipital.
Its caudal angles are separated from the rest of the bone by sharp triangular elevations, laterad of which are rough triangular areas, overlaid when the bones are articulated by a triangular spine from the tympanic bulla.
Its lateral surfaces are mostly covered by the wings. They appear at the sides of the elevated cranial end of the dorsal surface as triangular areas.
The caudal end is concave, rough, and has the form of the cranial end of the basilar part of the occipital.
The cranial end is nearly square and rough for articulation with the body of the presphenoid.
The Wing (alisphenoid; ala magna of the human sphenoid) ([Fig. 20], b).—This is a thin quadrilateral plate of bone attached by its medial border to nearly the whole of the lateral surface of the body. Its middle portion lies nearly in the same plane as the body, but its ends are curved dorsad so that its internal surface is concave and its external surface is convex. The curvature is most pronounced near the long lateral border, so that this border forms nearly a semicircle.
The internal surface supports the occipital lobe of the cerebrum. It is marked by a rounded groove (h) which is parallel with the lateral surface of the body. The dorsal margin of the groove projects mediad in the form of a sharp ridge which is broadest caudad, where it often reaches nearly to the posterior clinoid process. The groove passes craniad into three foramina. The first (cranial) of these, the orbital fissure (i), is large and lies between the wing, the body, and the pterygoid process. It is incomplete, but is completed by the presphenoid. The second foramen is small and rounded; it is the foramen rotundum (j). The third, foramen ovale (k), is larger and oval and penetrates the wing through about the middle of its longitudinal axis. Another minute foramen penetrates the sphenoid between the wing and the body of the bone, just laterad of the tuberculum sellæ. This foramen is continuous craniad with a groove on the dorsal surface of the pterygoid process; the groove and foramen constitute the pterygoid canal. It transmits a nerve.
The external surface shows the orbital fissure, the foramen rotundum and the foramen ovale, bounded ventrally by a sharp ridge, which is continued onto the pterygoid process. Between this ridge and the body the surface is longitudinally grooved for the tuba auditiva or Eustachian tube.