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Human Biology Models

Human Biology Models

Depicting functions and locations, the human biology models allow individuals a more comprehensive understanding of internal organs and systems. Blood movement, oxygen transport, muscle constriction, nerve firing, joint movement, and bone formation are brought to life in these incredibly detailed and accurate representations. Musculature models come colored coded for easy identification of muscle, fat, ligaments, and tendons. The human biology models can be used in both educational and clinical environments.

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BoneClones® Juvenile Human Skulls

BoneClones® Juvenile Human Skulls

How does the skull change as we age?

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BoneClones® Human Female Skull with Shotgun Wounds

BoneClones® Human Female Skull with Shotgun Wounds

This human skull displays the trauma inflicted by at least one shotgun round.

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Bone Clones® Neanderthal Tools

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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BoneClones® Human Female Skull with Multiple Gunshot Wounds

BoneClones® Human Female Skull with Multiple Gunshot Wounds

This trauma skull of a human female shows three small-caliber entrance gunshot wounds at the left side of the occipital bone.

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BoneClones® 1:2 Scale Hominid Skull Set

BoneClones® 1:2 Scale Hominid Skull Set

Bone Clones® 1:2 scale casts of 4 hominins provides an overview of some the most pivotal discoveries in hominin evolution.

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Bone Clones® Australopithecus afarensis Skull

Bone Clones® Australopithecus afarensis Skull

2.9 to 3.6 MYA. Australopithecus afarensis is the best represented early hominid with approximately 100 fossils representing the species.

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Bone Clones® Homo neanderthalensis (Child) Skull Teshik-Tash

Bone Clones® Homo neanderthalensis (Child) Skull Teshik-Tash

70000 YA. The Homo neanderthalensis (Child) skull, Teshik-Tash, was discovered by A. Okladnikov in Uzbekistan in 1938. This skull helped establish the easternmost range of Neanderthals.

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iworx® Physiology Recording Equipment

iworx® Physiology Recording Equipment

Easy To Use Physiological Recording.

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Bone Clones® Cro-Magnon 1 Craniums

Bone Clones® Cro-Magnon 1 Craniums

30000 to 32000 YA. This Cro-Magnon skull was discovered by L. Lartet and H. Christy on a cliff in 1868 (during the construction of railway lines in Les-Eyzies, France). Cro-Magnon, meaning 'big cliff', represents the earliest modern humans from Western Europe.

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Bone Clones® Farpoint Clovis Spear Point

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® Australopithecus boisei Craniums OH 5 (Zinjanthropus)

Bone Clones® Australopithecus boisei Craniums OH 5 (Zinjanthropus)

1.8 MYA. The Australopithecus boisei skull, is the most famous fossil from Olduvai Gorge, Tanzania. OH 5 was discovered by Mary Leakey in 1959 and originally classified as Zinjanthropus boisei by L. Leakey in Nature later that year.

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Bone Clones® Homo neanderthalensis Skull La Chapelle-aux-Saints

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 heidelbergensis Skull Atapuerca 5

Bone Clones® Homo heidelbergensis Skull Atapuerca 5

350000 to 500000 YA. The Homo heidelbergensis skull Atapuerca 5 was discovered in Spain in 1992 by Juan-Luis Arsuaga, in the fossil-rich caves of Sima de los Huesos (Bone Pit), Sierra de Atapuerca.

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Bone Clones® Homo neanderthalensis Skull La Ferrassie 1

Bone Clones® Homo neanderthalensis Skull La Ferrassie 1

50000 YA. The Homo neanderthalensis Skull La Ferrassie 1 was discovered in France in 1909 and described that same year by Capitan and Peyrony.

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