Nasal Passages
Smell is often considered to be the least important of all the senses,
but it may be one of the oldest, and probably acts on the subconscious
more than the other senses. There is little doubt that scents have
important roles in human behavior. The body is provided with glands to
produce specific odors, many of which appear to be associated with sexual
attraction and excitement, and others that have considerable significance
as well. The bond between a baby and its mother is thought to be tightened
by a form of "scent imprinting." In it, a baby which is suckling at the
mother's breast pushes his or her face into a bank of scent organs that
surround the nipple. A further sign of the importance of the sense of
smell is the way it becomes a major source of information when other
senses are not working, especially sight.
Only a small part of the nose and nasal cavity is taken up by the organs
of smell; the rest of it is mainly concerned with processing the airflow
on its way through to the lungs. The walls of the nasal cavity, and
particularly the flaplike middle and inferior conchae, are coated with
respiratory mucous membranes which incorporate a vast number of tiny
hairlike cells which act to move waves of mucus toward the throat. Dust,
bacteria, and chemical particles which are inhaled from the air are
trapped by the mucus, carried back and swallowed; they are then taken care
of by gastric juices to nullify any potential harm. The sense organs
themselves are made up of two yellowish-gray patches of tissue, called the
olfactory membranes, each about the size of a postage stamp. They are
located in a pair of clefts just under the bridge of the nose and at the
top of the nasal cavity. The reasons for the coloration are not completely
clear, but it seems to be necessary for the membrane to work. During
normal breathing, most of the air flows through the nose, with only a
small part reaching the olfactory clefts, but this is enough to get a
response to a new smell. When a person "sniffs the air" to detect smells,
the air moves through the nose much faster, increasing the flow that makes
its way to the olfactory clefts and so carrying more odor to those
sensors.
If you "follow your nose," you are taking a route that lies straight
ahead and is obvious (as the nose on your face), or else you are going
ahead without a plan, that is, following wherever instinct leads.