It is the very thin medial wall of the orbit
The plural form of lamina papyracea is laminae papyraceae.
Pleurotomella papyracea was created in 1881.
The plural form of lamina is laminae.
Anatomically, the word 'orbit' means the space within the skull within which the eye sits and moves about.
Elachista lamina was created in 1948.
Lamina Sankoh died in 1964.
Altamont Lamina was born in 1895.
Altamont Lamina died in 1950.
The two main functions of the orbit are to protect and support the eye, as well as to provide a bony socket for the eye to sit in and allow for movement of the eye.
The anatomical name for the eye socket is the orbit. It is a bony cavity in the skull that houses and protects the eye, along with its associated structures such as muscles, nerves, and blood vessels.
If the lamina is in two dimensions (i.e. not curled round into a third dimension) then the centre of gravity will be somewhere within the flat shape. The position of the centre of gravity will depend on the distribution of mass across the lamina. If the lamina is curled round into a third dimension then the centre of gravity will be somewhere within the volume enclosed, fully or partially, by the lamina; this may or may not be on the lamina.
The common name of the orbit bone is the eye socket. It is a bony cavity in the skull that contains the eye and its associated muscles and nerves.