Models
Engage students in your curriculum by bringing interactive and highly detailed models into the classroom. Displaying subject content visually, individuals are more likely to comprehend and retain the covered material. The simple models are easy to put together and are more helpful than two-dimensional representations for learning complex structures. The models are built of durable, structurally sound materials that will endure years of handling and cleaning.
Bone Clones® Neanderthal Tools
This set of tools, which includes awls, axes, knives, scrapers, cores, and hammer, was collected between 2000 and 2004 in Romania.
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Bone Clones® Set of 6 Fossil Hominid Tools from East Africa
1.5 to 1.2 MYA. This set of 6 Oldowan and Acheulean artifacts includes hand axes, choppers, a cleaver and spheroid tool from East Africa.
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Bone Clones® Farpoint Clovis Spear Point
11000 YA. The 51/4" Farpoint Clovis spearpoint was found in 2005 by Edgar Perez at a residential construction site in Malibu. The first such artifact found on the West Coast, the Clovis spearpoint indicates the presence of Clovis people 11,000 years ago and raises questions about the origins of the earliest inhabitants of the Americas.
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Bone Clones® Homo habilis Skull KNM-ER 1813
1.9 MYA. The Homo habilis Skull KNM-ER 1813 was discovered by K. Kimeu in 1973 at Koobi Fora, Kenya, and described by R. Leakey in Nature in 1973.
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Bone Clones® Australopithecus robustus SK-48 Craniums
1.5 to 2 MYA. The Australopithecus (Paranthropus) robustus Skull SK-48 was discovered by Fourie in Swartkrans, South Africa in 1950 and described by R. Broom in 1952.
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Bone Clones® Australopithecus boisei Cranium KNM-ER 406
1.7 MYA. Male. The Australopithecus boisei Skull KNM-ER 406 was discovered by R. Leakey at Koobi Fora, Kenya, in 1969.
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Bone Clones® Australopithecus africanus Craniums Sts 5 'Mrs. Ples'
Considered to have lived 2.5 MYA, the Australopithecus africanus Skull Sts 5 'Mrs. Ples' was discovered in 1947 by R. Broom and J. Robinson in Sterkfontein, Transvaal, South Africa.
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Bone Clones® Homo neanderthalensis Skull La Chapelle-aux-Saints
50000 YA. The Homo neanderthalensis Skull was discovered by A. and J. Bouyssomie and J. Bonneval in 1908 in La Chapelle-aux-Saints, France. It was the most complete Neanderthal skull found at the time.
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Bone Clones® Homo habilis Cranium OH 24
1.8 MYA. The Homo habilis Skull OH 24 (KNM) was discovered by P. Nzube in 1968 and first described by M. Leakey, Clark, & L. Leakey in Nature in 1971.
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Cardionics® PAT-Pediatric Auscultation Trainer
Pediatric auscultation training made easy.
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Cardionics® Classroom Learning Hardware
Share auscultation sounds with an entire classroom.
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Cardionics® Self Training System
Allow Your Students To Study On Their Own!




