This image is a blank diagram of the human skull with dotted lines pointing to different bones. Since it’s labeled “FREE PRINTABLE,” it’s meant for you to fill in the names of the skull bones yourself — like a labeling worksheet.
But since no specific question was asked (like “What bone is this?” or “Label part A”), and there are no multiple-choice options or instructions visible, I can’t solve a particular problem from this image alone.
However, if your homework task is to label the major bones of the skull shown here, here’s what you’d typically write on those lines:
Starting from the top and going around:
- Top front:
Frontal bone
- Side above ear:
Parietal bone (there are two, left and right)
- Back of head:
Occipital bone
- Below parietal, near temple:
Temporal bone (two of these too)
- Cheek area:
Zygomatic bone (cheekbone)
- Upper jaw:
Maxilla
- Lower jaw:
Mandible
- Between eyes/nose bridge:
Nasal bone
- Inside eye socket / behind nose:
Ethmoid and
Sphenoid (these are deeper and harder to see clearly in simple diagrams)
In most basic school worksheets, they expect you to label:
→ Frontal
→ Parietal
→ Temporal
→ Occipital
→ Zygomatic
→ Maxilla
→ Mandible
→ Nasal
(You might also see “Sphenoid” or “Ethmoid” if it’s more advanced.)
Since this is a printable worksheet without pre-labeled parts, your job is probably to look at a textbook or class notes and match each line to the correct bone name.
If you’re stuck on which line goes to which bone, imagine tracing each dotted line back to the bone it touches — then write that bone’s name on the blank line.
Final Answer:
The image is a blank skull diagram for labeling. Common bones to label include: Frontal, Parietal, Temporal, Occipital, Zygomatic, Maxilla, Mandible, and Nasal. Fill in each blank line with the correct bone name based on where the dotted line points.
Parent Tip: Review the logic above to help your child master the concept of skull labeling worksheet.