Vesalius gives a good account of the sphenoid bone, with its large and small wings and its pterygoid processes; and he accurately describes the vestibule in the interior of the temporal bone.
"Fathers of Biology"
Charles McRae
This fossa may also be implicated in fractures of the vault, fissures extending from the vertex to the orbital plate of the frontal bone, or to the lesser wing of the sphenoid.
"Manual of Surgery Volume Second: Extremities--Head--Neck. Sixth Edition."
Alexander Miles Alexis Thomson
Then perhaps you can tell me what the structures are which pass through the foramina of the sphenoid?
"The Firm of Girdlestone"
Arthur Conan Doyle