"young scientists club"
Eisco® Human Heart and Lungs Model
Dissectible model with 5 removable parts for viewing internal anatomical structures.
BoneClones® Piltdown Man Hoax Replica
This skull is a replica of Dawson's so-called "Dawn Man," which had been unearthed in a gravel pit at Piltdown near Sussex, England, by Charles Dawson in 1912.
BoneClones® Human Female Skull with Shotgun Wounds
This human skull displays the trauma inflicted by at least one shotgun round.
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.
Archaeocyathid (Atikokania) sp. (Lower Cambrian)
Detailed replica of an etched limestone slab containing multiple cross–sections of these extinct Lower Cambrian reef–building organisms, possibly of the genus Atikokania. Australia.
Trilobite Order Collection
Now you can bring some of the finest museum-quality specimens into your classroom at an economical cost with WARD'S life-like fossil reproductions. Nearly all of the reproductions in this impressive series are cast in durable plastic resin, and are hand-painted in colors designed to capture every detail of the original.
BoneClones® Large Dog Skeleton
The skull of the Bullmastiff reflects its canid origins and breed characteristics, being 60% Mastiff and 40% Bulldog; a short muzzle preferably with a level or slight under bite like a Bulldog, and a heavy, square skull with moderately wide set eyes like a Mastiff. This skeleton would be a great addition to any veterinary program or comparative anatomy program focused on canid evolution.
Bone Clones® Dmanisi Homo erectus Skull 3
1.7 MYA. The Dmanisi site in the country of Georgia has yielded incredible hominin fossil finds of the species Homo erectus, adding further documentation to the presence of Homo existing outside of Africa around 1.7 million years ago during the Plio-Pleistocene period.
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.

