| Skulls - Bone Clones began producing replica skulls in 1993. Our first skull replicas were reproduced from the real skulls of endangered and extinct animals. Since then we have added skull replicas of many more extinct and extant animals and humans. Because of our attention to detail, our skull products became sought after in many professional fields including anthropology, anatomy and zoology. All of our BoneClones® skull reproductions are listed below. We also offer a Fossil Hominid Skull Series, and A Half Scale Series of Skulls. |
Product # | Product Name | Description |
|---|---|---|
BA-100 | Storage Bag For Skulls | The simplest of our customers' requests took us the longest to produce, but here it is: a Bone Clones® bag for skulls. Useful for carrying and storing any number of Bone Clones® products... |
BC-001 | Male Gorilla skull | Gorillas are the largest of the world primates, reaching heights of 6 feet (when standing erect) and weights up to 400 pounds. Enormously strong, they have broad shoulders, thick muscular biceps, and forearms longer than their upper arms, with an arm span of over 8.5 feet... |
BC-002B | Orangutan Borneo Male Skull | Borneo and Sumatra orangutans diverged about 1.5 million years ago and are classified as distinct species. Borneo orangutans, as the name suggests, originate on the island of Borneo and are divided into 3 subspecies... |
BC-002S | Sumatra Orangutan skull | Sumatra orangutans are restricted to a small area on the island of Sumatra. With less then 5,000 individuals remaining in the wild they are considered in danger of imminent extinction. Habitat loss from illegal logging and establishing new palm oil plantations are their main threats... |
BC-003 | Chimpanzee Skull | Native to the African rain forest, this social, diurnal animal weighs up to 120 lbs and grows to 5 1/2 feet. A robust and lively ape, the Chimpanzee is capable of insight, and has the ability to create and use tools... |
BC-004 | Siberian Wolf Skull | Siberian Wolf Skull. The Siberian wolf is the largest of the canids. This particular skull features powerful teeth... |
BC-005 | Clouded Leopard skull | The Clouded Leopard is a medium-sized feline weighing 25 to 50 pounds. Its coat is distinctly marked with large, dark bordered ellipses shaped like clouds. The upper canine teeth of the clouded leopard are proportionally much longer than other felines... |
BC-006 | Gila Monster Skull | Gila Monster Skull BC-006. This skull is cast from a large and old specimen with excellent teeth and epiderm ... |
BC-007 | Fruit Bat Skull | Fruit Bat Skull BC-007. This small skull comes from the largest of the bat family.This small skull comes from the largest of the bat family. There are over 154 species of Old World fruit bats existing worldwide... |
BC-008 | Siberian Tiger skull | The larger of only two tiger species believed to be left in the wild, and the largest member of the cat family. This noc ... |
BC-009 | Dwarf Crocodile Skull | Dwarf Crocodile Skull BC-009. An evolutionary link between prehistoric dinosaur-like reptiles and present day birds, this species of crocodile is... |
BC-010 | Male Mandrill Baboon skull | Mandrills are the world's largest simian species with adult males achieving weights of 120 pounds. Male mandrills are also arguably the most colorful of all primates... |
BC-011 | Giant Anteater Skull | The Giant Anteater, found in Central and South America, has a very distinctive appearance, high-lighted by its curved, tubular snout. It reaches lengths of more than 7 feet and weights beyond 80 pounds... |
BC-012 | Tasmanian Wolf Skull | The Thylacine is also known as the Tasmanian Tiger (due to its striped fur) or the Tasmanian Wolf although it is, in fact, a marsupial... |
BC-013 | Tasmanian Devil Skull | The Tasmanian Devil is the largest extant marsupial carnivore. It is a hunter/scavenger with a short, compact body and a large, powerful head. It is said to rival the spotted hyena, pound for pound, in jaw strength... |
BC-014 | Sea Otter Skull | Sea Otter, skull BC-014. Inhabiting the seas and kelp beds of North America, the otter is a highly intelligent, playful, inquisitive and friendly mamm ... |
BC-015 | Cougar Skull | Known by many names, for example, Puma, American Lion, Deer Tiger, Mexican Lion, Panther, Painter, Mountain Lion, and Catamount, this giant cat makes its home in mountains, deserts and jungles throughout North and South America... |
![]() BC-016 | Human Male Asian Skull | This is an excellent example of a skull from an Asian individual and perfect for use with our European and African skulls for comparative study. Although the concept of race assessment is controversial, certain features of the skull may be of use in differentiating ancestral groups... |
BC-017 | Howler Monkey Skull | Howler Monkey Skull BC-017 This skull is from a male howler monkey, a large platyrrhine (flat-nosed) New World simian with a strong prehensile tail... |
BC-018A | Sabertooth Cat Smilodon californicus Skull Replica Antique Finish | One of the finest specimens from the Los Angeles County Museum of Natural History. Great care was taken when we cast this piece to preserve every detail and nuance of the original specimen... |
BC-018T | Sabertooth Cat Smilodon californicus Skull Replica Tarpit Finish | One of the finest specimens from the Los Angeles County Museum of Natural History. Great care was taken when we cast this piece to preserve every detail and nuance of the original specimen... |
![]() BC-019A | Fossil American Lion Skull Antique Finish | Felis atrox was the largest lion to have ever existed, this individual weighing an estimated 900 pounds. Found only in the western hemisphere, this 14,000 y.o. specimen came from the La Brea tar pits... |
BC-019T | Fossil American Lion Skull Tarpit Finish | Felis atrox was the largest lion to have ever existed, this individual weighing an estimated 900 pounds. Found only in the western hemisphere, this 14,000 y.o. specimen came from the La Brea tar pits... |
BC-020A | Dire Wolf Skull Antique Finish | Same skull as our BC-020T, but with a lighter Antique Finish... |
BC-020T | Dire Wolf Skull Tarpit Finish | Thriving during the Pleistocene, the Dire Wolf is not a direct ancestor of any of today's known species of canine. They co-existed in North America with Grey Wolves for about 100,000 years. Dire Wolves had short, thick legs, a larger, broader skull... |
BC-021 | Grizzly Bear Skull | The grizzly, being the largest of all bears, reaches a length of 10 feet and may weigh up to 1300 lbs. It is the largest carnivore... |
BC-022 | Great Dane Skull | The Great Dane (Canis familiaris) is thought to have originated from a cross between Asiatic mastiffs and Irish wolfhounds sometime during the 5th century A.D. They are second only to the Irish wolfhounds in size and height... |
BC-023 | Saint Bernard Skull | The first written account of a St. Bernard dog was in 1703, when another monk wrote about a cook who invented an exercise wheel for the monastery's dogs that turned a cooking spit to grill meat for their many guests... |
BC-024 | Maned Wolf Skull | Maned Wolf Skull. The South American maned wolf is not a true wolf. These rare, fox-like canids stand about 3 feet at the shoulder and have extremely... |
BC-025 | Giant Panda Skull | Giant Pandas with their distinctive black and white coloration are favorites the world over. They are cousins to bears with their lineages splitting off millions of years ago. The most specialized herbivore of all carnivores, their diet consists of 99 percent bamboo... |
BC-026 | Duck-Billed Platypus Skull | A platypus skull is broad and flat. It has a flexible bill covered with a thin membrane of skin that contains electro-sensitive cells... |
BC-027 | Komodo Dragon Skull | Komodo Dragon skull BC-027. Komodo dragons are the heaviest and longest of the world's lizards growing to a length of 10 feet and weighing upwards of 300 pounds. Their skulls are very similar to the extinct aquatic dinosaurs known as Mosasaurs... |
BC-028 | Tuatara Skull | Restricted to islands off the coast of New Zealand, the highly protected Tuatara has remained virtually unchanged for some 130 million years. It is the sole survivor of a reptilian order which became virtually extinct some 70 million years ago and is now represented by a single genus with one species... |
BC-029 | Hyacinth Macaw Skull | Hyacinth Macaw Skull BC-029. Hyacinth macaws are striking birds with long, pointed tail feathers and a huge, hooked black beak. Their plumage is a dramatic and deep cobalt blue overall with the head a slightly lighter color than the body... |
![]() BC-030 | Dinictis Skull | Dinictis lived on the plains of North America 35-40 m.y.a. Ancestors to modern cats, this ancient skull is reminiscent of today's clouded leopard skull... |
BC-031 | Human Male Australian Aboriginal Skull | This is an excellent example of a male skull. This specimen would serve as an interesting discussion piece around the concept of race assessment and the limitations of categorization (oversimplification) into 3 categories-European, African, and Asian... |
BC-031P | Human Male Australian Aboriginal Skull Painted | Found in 1905 near the lower Darling River in New South Wales, Australia, this individual was a very stout 50 year old male of the Bindaboo Tribe. Same as our BC-031 except painted to original color... |
BC-032 | Hyena Skull | Hyena Skull, Although a scavenger, the spotted Hyena also hunts in packs and can be extremely ferocious in its assaults. ... |
BC-033 | Dolphin Skull | The bottlenose dolphin is what comes to mind for most people who picture a dolphin ("Flipper" is a bottlenose dolphin). With a bigger brain than humans, they are considered to be very intelligent and may have complex language... |
BC-034 | Giraffe Skull | The Giraffe, unlike most animals, is born with horns intact, although they are folded onto the skull to ease their passage during birth. These horns, called ossicones, are not truly horns, but are made of bone and covered with skin and hair... |
BC-035 | Female Western Lowland Gorilla Skull | Wild female gorillas stand 3 1/2 to 5 feet tall and weigh 150 to 220 pounds. Their skulls are less massive than the males, having a reduced nuchal crest and lacking a sagittal crest... |
BC-036 | Male Gorilla skull (extra large) | Gorillas are the largest of the world primates. The adult male gorilla stands 4 to 6 feet tall when standing erect on slightly bowed legs. Wild males can weigh between 300 and 400 pounds. Gorillas are enormously strong with compact bodies and wide chests... |
BC-037 | Hippopotamus Skull | Hippopotamus were once common throughout all of sub-Saharan Africa but are now primarily restricted to the Nile River Valley of East Africa. They prefer moderately deep bodies of water with adjacent reed beds and plentiful grasslands... |
BC-038 | Nile Crocodile Skull | The Nile crocodile, whose body shape has remained fairly constant over the last 65 million years, is a member of the group called archosaurs. Other members include dinosaurs, flying reptiles and ancestors of the world's birds... |
BC-039 | Okapi Skull | Though not discovered by modern man until 1901, the Okapi is essentially a short-necked forest giraffe surviving since the Pleistocene. The giraffe's only cousin, they can be found only in the tall dense primary forests of the remote Ituri Forest of the Democratic Republic of Congo... |
BC-040 | Thoosuchus Skull | Thoosuchus were semi-aquatic batrachomorphs that lived worldwide over 200 million years ago. Similar in appearance to salamanders, thoosuchus are the most likely ancestors of the modern day tail-less amphibians we call frogs... |
![]() BC-041 | Warthog skull | This amazing Warthog skull holds the world record for the largest warthog tusks. Its beautifully curved upper tusks are over 20 inches long, giving its skull an almost sculptural appearance. |
BC-042 | Meerkat Skull | Meerkats, or suricates, are highly social members of the mongoose family. They live in multi-family groups of 5 to 30 members, known appropriately enough as a mob or gang... |
BC-043 | Harpy Eagle Skull | Harpy Eagle Skull BC-043. The largest and fiercest of the New World raptors, Harpy Eagles can weigh up to 18 pounds and have a 6.5 to 7-foot wingspan. ... |
BC-044 | False Killer Whale Skull | Growing up to 20 feet long, this species has the largest range of all Cetaceans.... |
BC-045 | Gavial, Skull | The Gavial, also called the Indian Gharial, is one of the largest (up to 23 feet) and most unusual of all the crocodilians. Characterized by its long, slender snout, it is equipped with 106 to 110 sharp spike-like teeth, well suited for their preferred diet of fish... |
BC-046 | Manatee Skull | Manatees, sometimes referred to as Sea Cows, and Dugongs, of the order Sirenia, are the only solely herbaceous aquatic mammals... |
BC-047 | Gibbon Skull | Gibbon skulls exhibit no sexual dimorphism and have the forward facing, wide-set eyes, short rostrum, and globular, larger brain case typical of most hominoids... |
BC-048 | Common Vampire Bat Skull | Common vampire bats are small to medium sized bats, 2.5 to 3.5 inches in length with a wingspan of about 8 inches. Weighing between 1 to 2 ounces, they can consume 60% of their body weight in blood... |
BC-049 | Colugo, Flying Lemur Skull | Little is known about these odd little nocturnal 2 to 4 pound animals. They were once erroneously thought to be related to lemurs and are still commonly (but wrongly) called Flying Lemurs, but they are neither lemurs nor do they fly... |
BC-050 | Tarsier Skull | Small, insectivorous, nocturnal tree-dwelling primates, tarsiers receive their name from their greatly elongated tarsus, or ankle, bones. This adaptation allows them to make prodigious, sure-footed leaps through the trees... |
BC-051 | Sumatra Rhinoceros Skull Only | Sumatra Rhinoceros Skull BC-051. Highly endangered, there are, perhaps, only 300 left in the world. The Sumatra Rhino is considered to be the oldest ... |
BC-051H | Sumatra Rhinoceros skull and Horns | Sumatra Rhinoceros Skull with horns BC-051H. Highly endangered, there are, perhaps, only 300 left in the world. The Sumatra Rhino is considered to be the oldest ... |
BC-052 | Cuban Solenodon Skull | Cuban Solenodon Skull BC-052. This family contains one surviving genus and two endangered species, both of which we are proud to offer. Unique, amon ... |
BC-053 | Haitian Solenodon Skull | Solenodon Skull, Haitian. This family contains one surviving genus and two endangered species, both of which we are proud to offer. Unique, among mamm ... |
BC-054 | African Lion Skull | The African Lion is both the most sexually dimorphic (with physical differences) of the big cats and the largest of African carnivores. Adult lions can be over 8 feet long and weigh between 250 and 500 pounds... |
BC-055 | Black-footed Ferret Skull | Black-footed Ferret Skull BC-055. Related to Sea Otters, this ferret is considered to be the rarest mammal in North America. There were only 31 indi ... |
BC-056 | Snow Leopard Skull | Leopard, Snow, skull BC-056 Living in the mountain ranges of Central Asia from China to the Himalayas, Snow Leopards are highly endangered in the wild ... |
BC-057 | Jaguar Skull | Ranging from the southwestern United States to South America, the Jaguar is the best climber of all the big cats, often waiting i ... |
BC-058 | White Rhino Skull Without Horns | The skull is available without horns, and the horns may be purchased separately as a set... |
BC-058H | White Rhino skull with Horns | White Rhino Skull BC-058. Weighing around 3000 pounds, the name “White Rhino” is actually a misnomer, an incorrect translation of a word that actual ... |
BC-059E | Human Female Asian Economy Skull | Great for comparison with our other Modern Human skulls. Smaller and more affordable than our male skulls... |
BC-060 | African Leopard Skull | Also from Asia, these large and beautiful cats are mostly nocturnal and solitary. They are endangered but breed well in ... |
BC-061 | Capybara Skull | Capybara Skull BC-061. The capybara is the largest rodent in the world. This skull comes from an exceptionally large individual, weighing anywhere fr ... |
BC-062 | Penguin Skull | Penguin Skull BC-062. The Magellan Penguin comes from southern South America and is a mid-sized penguin. Outside of Antarctica, the Magellan lives par ... |
BC-063 | Polar Bear Skull | Polar Bears are extremely large predators and dangerous to humans. These bears are often found on ice flows... |
BC-064 | Loggerhead Sea Turtle Skull | Found in large numbers in the Atlantic from Florida to The Carolinas, Loggerhead Sea Turtles are considered threatened, due to the over hunting for food... |
BC-065 | American White Pelican Skull | American White Pelican Skull BC-065. Pelicans are among the largest and heaviest birds in the world. And when it comes to their beak: as Ogden Nash ... |
BC-066 | Koala Skull | Koalas reportedly have one of the smallest brains relative to body size of all mammals. Their prune size brain halves don't even physically touch and still only occupy just 60% of the available space in their thick furry skull at that... |
BC-067 | Sabertooth Cat Skull Tarpit Finish | Deluxe Smilodon Skull Tarpit Finish BC-067. Found in the 1930's across the street from the La Brea Tar Pits. The site was immediately clo ... |
BC-068 | Bald Eagle Skull | Bald Eagle Skull BC-068. Native to North America and our national symbol, the Bald eagle's wingspan can reach over 7 feet. Primarily fish eaters, th ... |
![]() BC-069 | Vervet Monkey Skull | Vervet Monkey Skull BC-069 The Vervet or Green monkey lives in the woodlands and savannahs of Africa. It mainly feeds on fruit, although occasionally ... |
BC-070 | Rock Hyrax Skull | While it may look like a rodent, such as a rabbit or a guinea pig, the rock hyrax is actually more akin to elephants and manatees... |
BC-071A | Giant Fossil Beaver Skull Antique Finish | Belonging to the Pleistocene era, Rancholabrean epoch, the Giant Beaver became extinct about 10,000 year... |
BC-071T | Giant Fossil Beaver Skull Tarpit Finish | Belonging to the Pleistocene era, Rancholabrean epoch, the Giant Beaver became extinct about 10,000 years... |
BC-072 | Great Horned Owl Skull | Great Horned Owl Skull BC-072. The Great Horned owl is found throughout North, Central and South America. It is the largest of the Owls and is about ... |
BC-073 | Golden Eagle Skull | Golden Eagle Skull BC-073. North America's largest bird of prey with a wingspan of over 7 feet. Often hunting in pairs, each bird can carry 8 pounds ... |
BC-074 | Raven Skull | Raven Skull BC-074. The largest of the crow family, the raven often mates for life and can have a lifespan of 50 years. They are extremely intelligent... |
BC-075 | Crow Skull | Crow Skull BC-075. One of the most common birds in North America, they are very social and protect each other with various warning cries. We grateful ... |
BC-076 | Pygmy Hippo Skull | Pygmy hippos closely resemble their larger relatives the Nile hippo, standing 30 to 35 inches high at the shoulder, weighing 350 to 550 pounds and measuring about 5.5 feet from snout to vent... |
BC-077 | California Condor Skull | California Condor Skull BC-077. The California Condor is the largest flying bird in North America, having a wingspan of 9 1/2 feet and weighing up t ... |
BC-078 | Red-Tail Hawk Skull | Red-Tail Hawk Skull BC-078. Found throughout Central and North America, they will often migrate from harsher climates. Although the hawk will primar ... |
BC-079 | Cheetah Skull | Africa's 10,000-12,000 remaining cheetahs are found only in scattered areas of sub-Sahara, with a remnant population of less than 100 in Iran. Their long legs, deep chest, long flexible spine and semi-retractable claws provide them the resources to claim the title of "fastest land animal"... |
![]() BC-080 | Tamarin Skull | Tamarin Skull BC-080 One of the smallest monkeys in the world, the Tamarin ranges from Central to South America. They live in small social groups and ... |
BC-081 | Pygmy Marmoset Skull | Found throughout most of South America, the Pygmy Marmosets are the smallest of all living monkeys. Their diet consists... |
BC-082 | Elephant Shrew Skull | Also known as Sengi or Black and Rufous, the shrew belongs to the ancient order Afrotheria, which includes a wide variety of dissimilar looking animals who originated from a common African ancestor over 100 million years ago... |
BC-083 | Tree Shrew Skull | The tree shrew, which resembles a very small squirrel with a long snout, is not a shrew and does not entirely live in trees. More closely related to primitive prosimians, they have a higher brain-to-body mass ratio than humans... |
![]() BC-084 | Temple Monkey, Hanuman Langur Skull | Found in Bangladesh, India and Sri Lanka, they are also known as temple monkeys as they are sacred in India, traveling with the holy men... |
BC-085 | Harbor Seal Skull | Known also as the spotted seal, Harbor Seals can reach 6 feet long and weigh up to 375 pounds... |
BC-086 | Lesser Panda Skull | The lesser panda is also known as the red panda. It is found throughout the Himalayas. Although classification is still be... |
![]() BC-087 | Ring Tail Lemur Skull | Ring Tail Lemur Skull BC-087. These beautiful animals are well known for their striking black and white tail and walking on their hind legs. From Ma ... |
BC-088 | Pika Skull | Pikas may sometimes be called Rock Rabbits but they aren't actually rabbits. They are in the same order as rabbits and hares (Lagomorphs) but are classified as a different family... |
BC-089 | Giant Armadillo skull | The Giant armadillo is classified in the order Xenarthra, which means "strange joint," an apt description of their unusual cervical vertebrae. Xenarthra is a diverse mammalian group that originated in South America and includes the extinct giant armored gylpodont and the ground sloth... |
BC-090 | Wolverine skull | Wolverine, skull BC-090. Related to ferrets and weasels, they are the second largest living member of the family Mustelidae (only the Sea Otter is lar ... |
BC-091 | Chinese Water Deer skull | Deer, Chinese Water, skull BC-091. Originally from China and Korea, they have been introduced and are now wild in England and France. They are relativ ... |
BC-092 | Modern Human Male Asian Skull with Calvarium Cut | From our large Human Adult Asian Male Skeleton, this skull features a removable calvarium. Some notable features are the well defined "crisp" metopic suture and spring hinged jaw... |
BC-092-Set | Human Calvarium Cut Skull with Brain and Stand | This set includes a cast of a real brain set perfectly inside our Human Male Asian Skull (from our Human Male Asian Skeleton, SC-092-A) with the calvarium cut... |
BC-093 | Homo sapiens Cro-Magnon skull | 10,000-30,000 YA. This Cro-Magnon Skull was discovered in 1998 in the Rhine River deposits in Southwest Germany near Mainz. Since it was dredged from a gravel pit, the stratum can only be assumed... |
![]() BC-094 | Goliath Frog Skull | Goliath frogs inhabit swiftly flowing rivers in the dense humid rain forests of coastal Cameroon and Equatorial Guinea. Weighing up to 7 pounds, they measure 12.5 inches from snout to vent and almost 3 feet when outstretched... |
BC-096 | Peregrine Falcon Skull | The word peregrine is Latin for 'wanderer' and is an apt description for this raptor, which may migrate over 15,000 miles in a year. Peregrines are the best-known species of falcon, having been used for hunting for hundreds of years... |
BC-097 | Dugong skull | The Dugong belongs to the order Sirenia, which includes Manatees. Sirenians belong to a group called subungulates, which includes elephants and hyraxes, two animals that by appearances and habitat would seem to have nothing in common... |
BC-098 | Two-Toed Sloth Skull | Two-Toed Sloth Skull BC-098. Two-toed sloths are perhaps more heterothermic than any other mammal. Their body temperatures fluctuate from as low as 24 degrees C to as high as 33 degrees... |
BC-099 | American Black Bear Skull | Bear, American Black, skull BC-099 Found from Alaska to Mexico, the American Black Bear thrives. Reaching 6 feet and over 300 pounds, they are skillfu ... |
BC-099E | Economy American Black Bear Skull | Found from Alaska to Mexico, the American Black Bear thrives. Reaching 6 feet and over 300 pounds... |
BC-100 | Whitetail Deer Doe Skull | White-Tailed deer inhabit tropical and temperate deciduous forests ranging from Canada through much of South America. They are the most common ungulate in North America and the number one large game animal for hunters... |
BC-100E | Economy Whitetail Deer Doe Skull | Whitetail Deer Doe Skull, economy version of our BC-100 deer skull... |
BC-101E | Economy Common American Beaver Skull | The largest rodent in North America, the semi-aquatic beaver can weigh up to 60 pounds. It is an excellent swimmer, using its webbed back feet and paddle-like tail to maneuver through the water... |
BC-102 | Machairodus giganteus Skull | Machairodus giganteus. Age: Late Miocene, China. This cat lived approximately 4.5 to 5 million years ago and was about the size of a lion, but with a longer muzzle and narrower skull. Machairodus is an excellent example of a saber-toothed cat... |
BC-103 | Smilodon populator Skull | Smilodon populator is the largest of its species. Found in the eastern part of South America... |
BC-104 | Cave Lion Skull | Cave Lion Skull BC-104 The Cave Lion became extinct approximately 15,000 years ago. These large, conical-toothed cats of the North American Ice Age ... |
BC-105 | Alligator, 12 inch, Skull | All alligators (the American and Chinese species) are crocodilians. In 1967 American alligators were one of the first animals to be listed as an endangered species. Their population recovered to the extent that they were removed from the list... |
BC-106 | Megantereon nihowanensis Skull | Megantereon nihowanensis Skull BC-106 Megantereon cultridens (nihowanensis). Late Miocene to earliest Pleistocene. ( 6 - .9 ... |
BC-107 | Human Male European Skull | This is a good example of a European skull and perfect for use with our Asian and African skulls for comparative study. Although the concept of race assessment is controversial, certain features of the skull may be of use in differentiating ancestral groups... |
BC-108 | Walrus skull with tusks | The thick-skinned walrus may weigh approximately 900 to 3,500 pounds, with males being larger than females. The tusks of a walrus can grow up to one meter long. These tusks have many uses: fighting, eating, cutting ice, and allowing them to remain stable while asleep... |
![]() BC-109 | Owl Monkey Skull | Owl Monkey Skull BC-109 The only truly nocturnal primate is found in the northern part of South America. The owl monkey is a small creature with l ... |
![]() BC-110 | Human Male African Skull | This is an excellent example of an African skull and perfect for use with our Asian and European skulls for comparative study. Although the concept of race assessment is controversial, certain features of the skull may be of use in differentiating ancestral groups... |
BC-111 | 15-month-old Human Child Skull | This skull contains 12 teeth in both the upper and lower jaws. All of the fully erupted teeth are deciduous... |
BC-112 | Pileated Woodpecker Skull | Pileated Woodpecker Skull BC-112. The Pileated Woodpecker is the largest woodpecker found in most of North America. Because of its size and chisel-s ... |
BC-113 | Xenosmilus hodsonae Skull | Xenosmilus hodsonae Skull BC-113 Xenosmilus hodsonae Occurrence: Pleistocene (Irvingtonian) (1.7-1 MYBP), Florida... |
BC-114 | Short-Faced Bear Skull | Bear, Short-Faced, skull BC-114. Arctodus simus (Cope-1897), which is more closely related to the Andean Bears, Tremarctos than to Ursus, have been ... |
BC-115 | Human Trephined Skull | Human, trephined, skull BC-115. This female skull from the Tuanacen tribe in Bolivia is reported to be 1200 years old and was acquired in 1986. This p ... |
BC-116 | 5-year-old Human Child Skull, Archaic dated 8,000 years | Human, child, 5 years old, skull BC-116. The entire skeleton of this 5-year-old child was found in Morocco and is dated to be 8,000 years old. Complete ... |
BC-117 | Juvenile Machairodus giganteus Skull | Juvenile Machairodus giganteus Skull BC-117 . Age: Late Miocene, China. Living approximately 4.5 to 5 million years ago and about th ... |
BC-118 | Python Skull | Python Skull BC-118. The reticulated python gets its name due to its skin pattern which resembles a geometrical network. This non-venomous constrict ... |
BC-119 | Anaconda Skull | Anacondas are the world's heaviest snakes, growing to lengths of over 29 feet and weighing up to 550 pounds with a girth of 12" or more. These South American giants primarily inhabit tropical forests, savannas, marshes and wetlands and spend much of their time in the water... |
BC-120 | Pacu (Tambaqui) Skull | Pacu (Tambaqui) Skull BC-120. The Tambaqui (also known as Pacu) lives in the deep waters of the Amazon and Orinoco river basin of South America... |
BC-121 | Gaboon Viper Skull | Native to the western equatorial Africa, the Gaboon viper is the largest and heaviest member of viperine snakes, reaching lengths of almost 6 feet and weighing almost 30 pounds... |
BC-122 | Chinese Giant Salamander Skull | One of the world's largest amphibians, the Chinese Giant Salamander can reach lengths of almost 5 feet and weigh up to 50 pounds. They have a broad, flat head with tiny, lidless eyes set on top. The Vomerine teeth parallel the maxillary tooth rows in a long arc... |
![]() BC-123 | Female Bonobo Skull | Sometimes called the pygmy chimp, the Bonobo is a species distinct from the "common" chimp, P. troglodytes. Its behavior, especially among females, is thought to resemble humans’ more than the common chimp’s... |
BC-124 | Mountain Gorilla Skull | Mbongo, a Mountain Gorilla, was born in the high mountains of what was once the Belgium Congo and is now Zaire. He and another young gorilla named Ngagi were captured in 1930 by the famous explorers, Martin and Osa Johnson... |
BC-125 | Horse skull | Horse, skull BC-125. From an exceptionally large police horse. ... |
BC-126 | Saluki Skull | The graceful and elegant Saluki, also known as the Arabian Hound or the Persian Greyhound, may be the oldest known breed of domesticated canine. Images of the dog can be found in ancient carvings (dating back to 14,000 BC) and other artwork... |
BC-127 | Airdale Skull | The Airedale is sometimes called the King of Terriers, as it is the largest of terriers. The Airedale is a formidable hunter of water rats and other larger feathered and furred game. It sealed its reputation as a valuable dog during WWI... |
BC-128 | English Bulldog Skull | Although it is a short dog (standing about 12-15"), the Bulldog is wide and stocky, weighing 50-55 lbs., giving an overall appearance of great stability. The thick body is matched by a broad head with a short, pug muzzle ending with a wide, black nose... |
BC-129 | Alligator, 20 inch Skull | Alligators have been around for over 200 million years and are integral to the health of their wetland homes. Their presence insures a healthy environment for many plants and animals... |
BC-130 | Gavialosuchus (Giant Fossil Crocodile) | Discovered in 1990 in a phosphate mine in Polk County, Florida, this Gavialosuchus skull is considered the largest, most complete specimen ever found... |
BC-131 | Common House Cat Skull | The Common House Cat originated from African Wildcats (Felis silvestris lybica) and has been associated with humans for over 9,500 years. Their domestication was an offshoot of their value for ridding human grain storage areas of large numbers of rats and mice... |
BC-132 | Cave Bear Skull | The Cave Bear lived in Europe from about 300,000 to 15,000 BC. It became extinct at about the time Cro-Magnon appeared. This particular skull is among the largest and most complete ever found... |
![]() BC-133 | Human Female European Skull | This specimen is complex: the totality of features is most suggestive that the individual was European (White); however, a reasonable differential analysis would include Hispanic individuals and some Asians (including especially an individual from India)... |
BC-150-212 | Human Female and Male European Calvarium Cut Skulls Comparison Set | These skulls of a European Female and Male are excellent for comparative study and offered at a savings when purchased as a set. Each skull features a removable calvarium and spring hinged jaw... |
BC-134 | Sandhill Crane Skull | Sandhill Cranes are common from Alaska through the US and Cuba and Siberia. Both parents care for their young for about 10 months and have elaborate courtship dances... |
![]() BC-135 | 12-year-old Human Child Skull, with Dentition Exposed | The right side of the maxilla and jaw bone has been cut away to show an excellent example of the process of the adult teeth descending while the baby teeth are still in place... |
BC-136 | Mouse Lemur Skull | The Mouse Lemur, which inhabits Madagascar (as do all lemurs), is the world's smallest primate. Its roughly 5-inch tail is double the length of its body and head. It spends most of its life in trees... |
BC-137 | Rhesus Macaque Monkey Skull | Ranging throughout Asia from India to southern China, humans are the only primate species with a broader geographic range than rhesus monkeys. A medium-sized simian, adult males can weigh up to 20 pounds while females may weigh 10-14 pounds... |
BC-138 | Parson's Chameleon | Parson's Chameleons are the largest of the Old World chameleons and can grow to total lengths of 2-2 ½ feet. The large skulls of the Male Parson's Chameleons have strong bony ridges and two warty "horns," which they use to joust each other for dominance.... |
![]() BC-139 | French Bulldog Skull | The French Bulldog, affectionately called "Frenchie," is essentially a mini-English Bulldog. It is thought by some that the smaller specimens of the English Bulldog were taken aboard ship to France because they could be more easily hidden... |
BC-140 | Gigantopithecus blacki | Reconstruction by Dr. Grover Krantz based on large Chinese male fossil jaw, assuming bipedal posture and ape-sized brain. Licensed exclusively to Bone Clones® by the estate of Grover Krantz... |
BC-141 | Meganthropus Skull | Reconstruction by Dr. Grover Krantz, based on Sangirin 31. Licensed exclusively to Bone Clones® by the estate of Grover Krantz. More information on Meganthropus and Dr. Krantz to come... |
BC-142E | Economy Raccoon Skull | The raccoon is known for its famous black bandit mask around its eyes and the black rings on its tail... |
BC-143E | Economy Coyote Skull | The coyote is found from Central America through central Canada and into Alaska. Belonging to the family Carnivora, it can be distinguished from domestic dogs by its pointed ears and drooping tail... |
BC-144E | Economy Gray Fox Skull | The Gray Fox is nicknamed The Tree Fox due to its ability to climb trees and leap from branch to branch with catlike agility... |
BC-145E | Economy White-tailed Jackrabbit Skull | Found throughout western and central Canada and the United States, white-tailed jackrabbits prefer open grasslands, pastures, and open fields. Jackrabbits are hares and hares are rabbits, but not all rabbits are hares... |
BC-146E | Economy Bobcat Skull | The bobcat is heavily populated in the southeastern United States. Their range extends from southern Canada throughout the US to southern Mexico... |
BC-147 | Red Wolf Skull | The Red Wolf is larger than the Coyote and smaller than the Gray Wolf. Some authorities debate its identity considering it the result of the cross-breeding between the Coyote and Gray Wolf... |
BC-148E | Economy Skunk Skull | Black with wide, white stripes from head to tail and a thin white stripe on the muzzle, the Striped Skunk is found from Central Canada to Northern Mexico... |
BC-149 | Human Female Asian Skull | This is an excellent example of an Asian Female. Features which suggest Asian ancestry include a flat nasal root, an obtuse nasal angle, a broad nasal aperture from top to bottom, short nasal spine, no nasal sill, a somewhat rounded dental arcade in the upper jaw... |
BC-150 | Human Female European Skull with Calvarium Cut | This skull of a European Female features a removable calvarium and spring hinged jaw. It is an exceptionally detailed, high quality skull, with all internal and external osteological structure and detail accurately and crisply reproduced... |
BC-151 | Ruby-throated Hummingbird Skull | The ruby-throated hummingbird is mostly found in eastern and central US, but breeds throughout the central US and Central America. Often found in gardens, it winters in tropical rainforest... |
BC-152 | Human Male Skull with a 32-caliber Gunshot Wound | Human male skull with large caliber bullet wound to head. European male, 25 years of age, modern specimen, North America... |
BC-153 | Barn Owl Skull | The barn owl derives its common name from its habit of nesting and roosting in secluded barn lofts, though it will take refuge in any secluded spot. It has a white, heart-shaped face, a round head and no ear tufts... |
![]() BC-154 | Barred Owl Skull | A medium-sized owl, with a yellow beak, atypical brown eyes, a rounded head lacking ear tufts, the barred owl is named for its barred and spotted cinnamon brown, tan and white plumage... |
BC-155 | Burrowing Owl Skull | Burrowing Owls reside in open dry grasslands and deserts of North and South America, primarily in the west, although also in the higher, drier parts of south central Florida... |
BC-156 | Sarcosuchus imperator Supercroc Skull | Sarcosuchus imperator (flesh eating crocodile), nicknamed Supercroc, lived during the Cretaceous period (65 - 144 MYA). With an estimated body length of 40 feet, and a skull over 5 1/2 feet long, Supercroc is one of the largest crocodiles that ever walked the Earth... |
BC-157E | Economy Javelina Skull | The Javelina (pronounced Ha - va - LEE - na), or Collared Peccary, is a smallish pig-like animal native to portions of South, Central and southwestern North America (and is the only pig-like wild animal native to the United States)... |
BC-158E | Economy Ringtail Skull | The Ringtail is a cat-sized carnivore with a fox-like face, large eyes and ears, short legs and a long, ringed tail. One of the smallest (and most carnivorous) members of the Procyonid family... |
BC-159 | Mammoth Skull | Mammoths belong to the order Proboscidea, which also includes the American Mastodon and the African and Indian Elephant. The larger species of Mammoth, which appeared about 4 MYA, became extinct about 10,000 years ago... |
BC-160 | Mosasaur, Platecarpus Skull | Platecarpus planifrons, a medium-sized mosasaur that lived approximately 86 MYA during the late Cretaceous Period. One of only a few known, this specimen is the best in existence. Complete with pterygoid teeth... |
BC-160-N | Mosasaur, Platecarpus Skull and Neck | Platecarpus planifrons, a medium-sized mosasaur that lived approximately 86 MYA during the late Cretaceous Period. One of only a few known, this specimen is the best in existence. Complete with pterygoid teeth... |
BC-161 | Great Blue Heron Skull | The largest heron species in North America, the great blue herons stand 4 feet tall with long, flexible necks and a 7-foot wingspan. Its back, wings and belly are a bluish gray, while its face is white and long bill is yellow... |
BC-162 | Horned Puffin Skull | Also known as the Sea Parrot, the Horned Puffin is one of the most common birds in the North Atlantic. It sheds the outer layers of its bill as winter approaches... |
![]() BC-163 | Aye-aye Skull | From the rainforests of Madagascar, the Aye-Aye is, perhaps, the strangest of the primates. They were first classified as rodents due to their rodent-like incisors... |
BC-164 | Muntjac Skull | Also called the Barking Deer, the Muntjac barks when predators are near. They are relatively common in their home range of China and Taiwan with over 600,000 individuals... |
BC-165 | Kiwi Skull | Living in the New Zealand forests, the Brown Kiwi (as well as all Kiwis) produces the largest egg, proportional to its size, of any bird. The egg weighs around one pound and practically fills the entire body cavity.... |
BC-166 | Osprey Skull | Ospreys are one of the most abundant birds of prey living on all continents except Antarctica. Among the reasons for their success is that they are able to build their large nests practically anywhere... |
BC-167 | Northern Cardinal Skull | Northern Cardinals are quite prolific from Canada through North and Central America, where they adapt well to humans and moderate temperatures... |
BC-168 | American Robin Skull | American Robins are common throughout North and Central America, with their range extending to Alaska. They live in human gardens and fields but prefer dense wooded areas to build nests and raise their young... |
BC-169 | Yellow Billed Cuckoo Skull | The Yellow-billed Cuckoo, found throughout North and South America, is often seen near lakes and streams in woodland areas. This medium-sized bird is generally solitary, but pairs up during breeding season... |
BC-171 | Common Snipe Skull | The Common Snipe is a wading bird found in wet, grassy areas in North and South America, Europe, Northern Africa, and Asia. The Common Snipe uses its remarkably long, pointed and straight bill to poke around in the mud for snails... |
BC-170 | Blue Jay Skull | The Blue Jay is a large songbird (9-12 inches long) found from Texas to Florida and up through Southern Canada. It is easily identified by its distinctive coloring-various shades of bright blue on its upperparts... |
BC-172 | Mexican Wolf Skull | The Mexican wolf is the smallest of the North American wolves. Highly endangered, its range until recent times was from Texas, New Mexico, and Arizona through central Mexico... |
BC-173 | Toco Toucan Skull | From eastern South America, the Toco Toucan is the largest member of its family, Ramphastidae. They live high in the treetops and are noted for their large, beautiful, yellow bill... |
BC-174 | Wreathed Hornbill Skull | The Wreathed Hornbill is a large (4-8 pounds) black bird with a yellowish tail, red eyes, and a long, thick beak topped with a small 'wreathed' casque with up to 9 ridges. The male has a bright yellow inflatable throat pouch, while the female's is blue. |
BC-175 | Black Hornbill Skull | Asian Black Hornbills are medium-sized hornbills found primarily in lowland and swampland forests over Malaysia, Indonesia and Thailand. Hornbills are named for their horn shaped beaks often topped by a large hollow chamber called a casque... |
BC-176 | Scarlet Ibis Skull | The Scarlet Ibis is found in Brazil and Venezuela and are related to the Spoonbills. Their diet consists mostly of crustaceans and invertebrates... |
BC-177 | Roseate Spoonbill Skull | Found in the southeast US from Florida to Texas, the Roseate Spoonbill inhabits swamps and mudflats, where they use their unusual bill to scoop up plants, insects and small fish... |
BC-178 | Human Female African-American Skull | This is an excellent example of an African American Female Skull. Features which suggest African-American ancestry are the moderate alveolar prognathism... |
BC-179 | King Cobra Skull and base | The King Cobra is the largest of all the cobras, reaching a length of 18 feet. Their home range is India, Indonesia, Malaysia and the Philippines. They are very aggressive and guard their caves and home range... |
![]() BC-180 | Fetal Human Skull 31 Weeks | Estimated at 31 weeks, this Bone Clones® cast of a Human Fetal skull exhibits characteristics of prenatal development. The cartilaginous Fontanelles are clearly visible in the Anterior, Mastoid and Sphenoid regions of this skull... |
![]() BC-181 | Fetal Human Skull 32 Weeks | Estimated to be 32 weeks old, this skull exhibits characteristics of prenatal development. This reproduction is also offered as part of two chronological sets... |
![]() BC-182 | Fetal Human Skull 40 Weeks | Estimated to be 40 weeks old, this skull exhibits characteristics of prenatal development... |
BC-183 | 5-year-old Human Child Skull, Dentition exposed and Calvarium Cut | This specimen reveals both underlying dentition and the endocranium. The cortical bone overlying the buccal aspect of the left maxilla has been dissected away... |
BC-184 | Ganges River Dolphin Skull | Living in the muddy water systems of India, Nepal, Bhutan, and Bangledesh, The Ganges River Dolphin (also known as Susu) is almost blind and is believed to be able to only see light and dark. Although sometimes found in small groups, they are mostly considered solitary. Their pointed slender teeth are ideal for capturing small fish while tooling around the river bottoms... |
BC-185 | Human Male Skull with Machete Wounds | Forensic osteologic modern human skull with machete wounds to the head. Cast by us from an original skull that is in a North American medical school forensic osteology teaching collection... |
BC-186 | Pit Bull Dog Skull | Pit Bull is the shortened name for the American Pit Bull Terrier, although it is often used to refer to other terrier mixes (for example, the Staffordshire Bull Terrier)... |
BC-187 | 14-month-old Human Child Skull | Considered to be consistent with the development of a 14 to 16-month-old, the age of this skull has been defined by using a combination of measurements and landmarks... |
BC-188 | 5-year-old Human Child Skull, Calvarium Cut | The removal of the calvarium allows junior osteologists to study the complex anatomy of the endocranium, especially the pathways of the various foramina of the skull base, and the orbit.... |
BC-189 | 5-year-old Human Child Skull, with Dentition Exposed | This is an excellent example of a child's skull. The anterior, posterior, sphenoidal and mastoidal fontanelles are all closed. The spheno-occipital synchondrosis and the calvarial sutures are all open... |
BC-190 | 5-year-old Human Child Skull | All the deciduous (baby teeth) are present in the upper and lower jaws of this child's skull. Age assessment is best done through an examination of dentition and fontanelle closure... |
BC-191-A | Articulated Human Medical Study Skull | Our premier anatomy skull, BC-191-A comprises 22 separate bones and 32 separate teeth. It is articulated bone by bone from the completely disarticulated version... |
BC-191-D | Disarticulated Human Medical Study Skull | This skull is ideal for osteological teaching. It allows the student to appreciate the individual bones, the sutures between the bones, and the foramina of the skull... |
BC-192 | Sacred Ibis Skull | Fossil Ibis date back 60 million years. The ancient Egyptians considered the Sacred Ibis a god and appears in the hieroglyphic record. Today they are rare in Egypt, and are mostly found in Madagascar and parts of Africa... |
BC-193 | Human Female Scaphocephalic Skull | This skull provides an excellent example of a condition in which the skull is abnormally long and narrow as a result of premature closure of the sagittal suture... |
![]() BC-194 | Fetal Human Skull 20 Weeks | Estimated to be 20 weeks old, this skull exhibits characteristics of prenatal development... |
BC-194-SET | Human Fetal Skull Set of 5 Skulls | A comparison set of 5 human fetal skulls illustrating fetal development at 20, 29, 31, 32 and 40 weeks... |
![]() BC-195 | Fetal Human Skull 29 Weeks | Estimated to be 29 weeks old, this skull exhibits characteristics of prenatal development... |
BC-196 | Human Female Skull with Shotgun Wounds | The skull is that of a young African-American woman in her early 20's. The cranium was penetrated by two rounds from a .410 shotgun fired at close-range. The right jaw was hit by a third round, directed downward... |
BC-197 | Human Masculinized Female Skull | An atypical skull from a 68-year-old white female. It includes a mixture of sexual traits and appears to be an example of age-related "masculinization" (Walker, 1995)... |
BC-198 | Roman Gladiator Human Skull | Aged somewhere between 72AD and 472 AD, this skull was unearthed near the Coliseum in Rome, Italy that was built during the reign of Emperor Vespasiano. This skull is from a formal grave yard for known coliseum gladiators... |
BC-199 | Spanish Conquistador Human Skull with Broad Ax Trauma | Found exposed by road equipment on ranch in Chama, New Mexico. Skeleton was destroyed, but skull and artifact remained in place and intact. Ax head consistent with material culture of 16th-17th Century Spain... |
![]() BC-200 | Human Peruvian Female Skull with Cranial Binding | Dated over 2,000 years old this skull is an extreme example of binding and longation. Cranial binding is the shaping of the skull, when a child is very young, usually an infant... |
![]() BC-201 | Human Peruvian Male Skull with Cranial Binding and Trephination | Dated over 2,000 years old this skull is an extreme example of binding and elongation. Cranial binding is the shaping of the skull, when a child is very young, usually an infant... |
BC-202 | Human Female Skull with Multiple Gunshot Wounds | Human female skull with three small-caliber gunshot wounds to the head (modern specimen, North America). Cast by us from an original skull in a North American medical school teaching collection. .. |
![]() BC-203 | Human Male African-American Skull BC-203 | The totality of the features of this skull is in keeping with an African ancestry. These features include a projecting profile, a depressed nasal root, an obtuse nasal angle, a short anterior nasal spine... |
BC-204 | Human Elderly European Male Skull | Elderly European male skull, 80 years old. Cast by us from an original specimen in a North American medical school forensic osteology teaching collection.... |
![]() BC-205 | Chimpanzee Fetal Skull | Near term fetal Chimpanzee skull shows the beginning eruption of incisors and early molars. An excellent comparison with our Human fetal skull... |
![]() BC-206 | Orangutan Fetal Skull | Near term fetal Orangutan skull shows eruption of incisors and early molars... |
BC-208 | Orangutan Infant Skull | 11 months to one year Orangutan infant skull shows eruption of incisors and early molars.... |
BC-207 | Chimpanzee Infant Skull | Chimpanzees are our closest living relatives, our genetic ties being far closer than those that chimps share with gorillas. We share 96 to 99.5% of our genetic material... |
BC-209 | 16-month-old Human Child Skull | An examination of this skull suggests an age of 16 to 18 months. The skull has 8 teeth in the maxillary arcade and 9 teeth in the mandibular arcade, all of which have a deciduous morphology.... |
BC-210 | 3-year-old Human Child Skull | The dentition of this skull suggests an age of 3 to 4 years. There are 12 teeth in the maxillary arcade and 12 teeth in the mandibular arcade... |
BC-211 | Human Female Asian Skull | Human Female Skull, greater than 35 years of age, this is the skull from our skeleton, SC-211, composed entirely of associated bones... |
BC-212 | Human Male European Skull with Calvarium Cut | This skull of a European Male is an exceptionally detailed, high quality skull, with all internal and external osteological structure and detail accurately and crisply reproduced... |
BC-213 | Human Female American Indian Skull | This skull is typical of a southwestern American Indian. It has broad, flattened, forward-projecting zygomas... |
BC-214 | Giant Fossil Armadillo Skull | Giant fossil armadillo From the late Pliocene, early Pleistocene era (early Irvingtonian), circa 1.8 MYA. Found in a land site, 2 of the teeth were found in the Aucilla river, Florida. Lower jaw not found but may be available at a future date... |
![]() BC-215 | Fetal Human Skull 13 Weeks | Estimated to be 13 weeks old, this skull exhibits characteristics of prenatal development... |
BC-216 | 1 1/2-year-old Human Child Skull | The dental evidence (the eruption patterns found in both the maxillary and mandibular arcade) of this skull suggests an age of 14 to 22 months, while the nondental evidence points to an age between 1 to 2 years... |
BC-217 | Human Male Skull with Hammer Blows | Adult European male from North America. Cast by us from an original specimen in a North American medical school forensic osteology teaching collection... |
![]() BC-218 | Fetal Human Skull 17 Weeks | Estimated to be 17 weeks old, this skull exhibits characteristics of prenatal development... |
BC-219 | Human Female European 7-Piece Study Skull | Our 7 piece Study Skull is designed unlike any other skull available on the market. It has a superb balance of detail and manageability... |
![]() BC-220 | Fetal Human Skull 21 1/2 Weeks | Estimated to be 21 1/2 weeks old, this skull exhibits characteristics of prenatal development... |
BC-221 | Kori Bustard Skull | Kori Bustards are colored a somber gray, with a black head crest, and yellow legs. Males stand 30-36 inches tall and weigh up to 35 pounds. This is the upper weight limit for flight in birds... |
BC-222 | Human Adult Cradle-boarded Skull | Cradle Boarded skull, possibly microcephalic, as reported and collected by Ales Hrdlicka in 1910. Prehistoric, from Peru. We are grateful to the San Diego Museum of Man for the loan of this specimen... |
BC-223 | Giant Fossil Hyena Skull | From China, found in a location fairly common for large fossil cats, this particular specimen was discovered in the Gansu province, Guanghe Formation, China and was dated at around 4.5 to 5 MYA... |
BC-224 | Human Female European 7 piece Color-Coded Study Skull | Our 7 piece Color-Coded Study Skull is designed specifically to teach the basic elements of the human skull... |
![]() BC-225 | Fetal Human Skull 30 Weeks | Estimated to be 30 weeks old, this skull exhibits characteristics of prenatal development... |
![]() BC-226 | Fetal Human Skull 34 Weeks | Estimated to be 34 weeks old, this skull exhibits characteristics of prenatal development... |
![]() BC-227 | Fetal Human Skull 35 Weeks | Estimated to be 35 weeks old, this skull exhibits characteristics of prenatal development... |
![]() BC-228 | Fetal Human Skull 40 1/2 Weeks | Estimated to be 40 1/2 weeks old, this skull exhibits characteristics of prenatal development... |
BC-228-SET | Human Fetal Skulls Set of 12 | An unprecedented reproduction of twelve stages of fetal development, our set has been compiled from original skulls loaned to Bone Clones by several institutional collections. This set makes it possible to carefully study developmental change in small increments of time... |
BC-229 | Saltwater Crocodile Skull | The largest crocodilian species alive today, this Saltwater Crocodile is estimated to have been 21.5 feet long and 1400 pounds (on the basis of the 33-inch skull length)... |
BC-241 | Elephant Bird Skull | Though the Elephant Bird Skull looks similar to that of a Moa, the Elephant Bird belongs to a separate family, and the skull is much larger... |
BC-242 | American Kestrel Skull | The American Kestrel is the smallest and most common of the North American falcons. The more colorful male is rusty with blue-gray wings, a pale underside, two black stripes on its face, and a series of pale spots on the edge of its flight wings... |
BC-243 | Road Runner Skull | The Roadrunner is a member of the cuckoo family found throughout the Southwest. Although it can fly if it must for short distances, it is known for its movement along the ground, reaching speeds over 15 mph. With amazing quickness it can grab a hummingbird out of the air... |
BC-244 | Glaucous Gull Skull | The Glaucous Gull is a large, predatory bird found in frozen North America and the Atlantic coasts of Europe. With a wing-span up to 6', this very pale gull has a white head and underparts, a gray back, gray wings with white tips, and a white tail... |
BC-245 | Short-eared Owl Skull | The Short-eared Owl is mottled brown and white on the upperparts and white (male) or rusty (female) with brown streaks on its underparts. It has a round face, featuring yellow eyes surrounded by black circles... |
BC-246 | Two-faced Calf (Craniofacial duplication) | Two calf heads, fused, but one endocranium and one foramen magnum that connected to a single neck and body. A very rare and beautiful specimen considering that the skulls are literally mirror images of one another... |
BC-247 | 4-year-old Human Child Skull | An examination of this skull suggests an age of 3 ½ to 4 ½ years. The skull of this young child shows, in perfect detail, an entire set of deciduous (juvenile) dentition in both the upper and lower jaws... |
![]() BC-248 | Female Chimpanzee Skull | Chimpanzees are our closest living relatives, our genetic ties being far closer than those that chimps share with gorillas. We share 96 to 99.5% of our genetic material... |
BC-251 | Babirusa Skull | A member of the pig family, the Babirusa is found in the rainforests on some of the Indonesian islands. Its most striking feature is its two sets of tusks... |
![]() BC-252 | Male Bonobo Skull Replica | Living in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (formerly Zaire), the Bonobo is smaller, has more webbing between its toes and less sexual dimorphism than the common chimp... |
BC-253 | Human Male Asian Skull | This Human Male Asian Skull with a full set of associated teeth provides exceptional detail. In particular, the pterygoid plates, condyles, and styloid processes are highly pronounced and complete. It possesses the features that are characteristic of the Asian skull... |
BC-254 | Secretary Bird Skull | In a family of its own, the Secretary Bird may get its name from its resemblance to 19th century bank secretaries with its quill-like feathers extending behind its head... |
![]() BC-255 | Orangutan Borneo Female Skull | The orangutan is the only member of the great apes to originate from Asia. Also unlike the other great apes, the orangutan generally lives a solitary life, the exception being the extended relationship between the mother and its offspring... |
![]() BC-256 | 4-month-old Human Child Skull | Cast from an original specimen in a Forensic Osteology teaching collection at a North American medical school, this expertly crafted skull shows features typical of infants... |
BC-258 | Male Chacma Baboon Skull | The Male Chacma Baboon occurs in Angola, Botswana, Mozambique, Namibia, South Africa, Zambia and Zimbabwe. Able to run 35-40 mph, these primates also possess sharp hearing and eyesight... |
![]() BC-259 | Female Chacma Baboon Skull | The Female Chacma Baboon is found on the savannahs of southern Africa. A distinctive feature of this baboon is its dog-like muzzle, which motivates one of its common names, the Dog-faced Monkey... |
BC-260 | White Bull Terrier Skull | The White Bull Terrier is a muscular and active dog that has a head shaped like an egg in side view. This breed was created by crossing the Old English Bulldog and the Old English Terrier... |
![]() BC-261 | Female Mandrill Baboon Skull | Female Mandrill Baboons are about half the size of their male counterparts and have much duller colors. Both sexes have a mane covering their neck and shoulders... |
BC-262 | 29 1/2 Inch Alligator Skull | This skull is from one of the largest American Alligators ever found in Florida. The weight of the alligator was an incredible 1043 pounds... |
![]() BC-263 | Weeping Capuchin Skull | The Weeping Capuchin is a social monkey found in deciduous and tropical forests in South America. Their diet consists of fruits, nuts, berries, small vertebrates and invertebrates... |
![]() BC-264 | Slow Loris Skull | The Slow Loris is found in tropical forests in Southeast Asia. This round-faced prosimian with big, fixed eyes is 10-15 inches long and weighs 1-3.3 pounds... |
![]() BC-265 | Black Spider Monkey Skull | The Spider Monkey, which can be found in the Amazon rain forest, gets its name from the length of its spindly limbs. Weighing about 20 pounds, it grows to a length of 15-22 inches... |
![]() BC-266 | Slender Loris Skull | The Slender Loris, an arboreal, nocturnal primate, can be found in forests of Southern India and Sri Lanka. It gets its name from its long, thin limbs... |
BC-267-H | Human Sagittal Cut Half Skull | This cast allows for close inspection of nasal passages and sinus cavities, while also showing such details as foramina and grooves for branches of meningeal vessels in the interior of the cranium... |
BC-267-HP | Color-Coded Human Sagittal Cut Half Skull | The skull is color-coded according to Frank H. Netter's human skull illustration in Atlas of Human Anatomy, 3rd Ed. (2003). Each bone is carefully hand-labeled... |
![]() BC-268 | 6-year-old Human Child Skull | This excellent example of a child shows a dental eruption pattern consistent with that of a 6-7-year-old... |
![]() BC-270 | 13-year-old Human Child Skull | This skull offers an excellent example of an adolescent. With the exception of the wisdom teeth, all permanent teeth are fully erupted, and no deciduous dentition remains... |
BC-271 | Alligator Snapping Turtle Skull | The largest of the North American freshwater turtles, the Alligator Snapping Turtle may grow to 200 pounds and a shell length over 2 feet... |
BC-272 | American Crocodile Skull | American Crocodiles live in southern Mexico, along the Central American coast, the Caribbean and southern Florida... |
BC-273 | Black Caiman Skull | Black Caimans, named for their dark coloring, are the largest member of the group called Alligatorinae, which includes Alligators and Caimans... |
BC-274 | 1-year-old Human Child Skull | The age of this skull was determined by reference to the natural bone specimen and a panoramic radiograph. An examination of both suggests an age likely greater than 1 year and less than 18 months... |
![]() BC-275 | 2-year-old Human Child Skull | The age of this skull was determined by reference to the natural bone specimen and a panoramic radiograph. An examination of both suggests an age between 2 and 3 years. There are 10 teeth in the maxillary arcade and 10 teeth in the mandibular arcade... |
![]() BC-276 | 8-year-old Human Child Skull | The age of the skull was determined by referring to the natural bone specimen and a panoramic radiograph, both of which suggest an age range of 5-9 years. There are 12 teeth in the maxillary arcade and 12 teeth in the mandibular arcade... |
![]() BC-277 | 9-year-old Human Child Skull | The age of the skull was determined by referring to the natural bone specimen and a panoramic radiograph, both of which suggest a range from 7.5 to 12.5 years. The root apices of the permanent incisors and first molars are almost completely formed... |
![]() BC-280 | 1-year-old Human Child Skull with Calvarium Cut | By removing the calvarium, junior osteologists are able to learn the complex anatomy of the endocranium. The age of this skull was determined by reference to the natural bone specimen and a panoramic radiograph... |
![]() BC-281D | Fetal Human Skull 40 1/2 weeks (full term)with Calvarium Cut | By removing the calvarium, junior osteologists are able to learn the complex anatomy of the endocranium. The age of this skull was determined by reference to the natural bone specimen and a panoramic radiograph... |
BC-282 | Indri Skull | The Indri, like all other lemurs, is endemic to Madagascar. The largest of the prosimians, the Indri may reach a weight of about 29 pounds and a length of 4 feet... |
![]() BC-283 | Fairy Armadillo Skull | The Pink Fairy Armadillo lives in the dry grasslands and sandy plains of Central Argentina. The smallest of the armadillos, it may reach lengths, including its tail, of 6 inches... |
![]() BC-284 | Sifaka Lemur Skull | The Sifaka, an arboreal primate, is able to jump 30 feet with its powerful hind legs. An herbivore, it prefers a diet of leaves, flowers, bark and fruit... |
![]() BC-293 | Human Male European Skull with Calvarium Cut and Numbered | This is a numbered version of our BC-212, an exceptionally detailed, high quality European Male skull with the calvarium cut... |
BC-1234-SET | Set of 6 Primate Skulls | Great for comparative study, these 6 primate skulls display characteristic family similarities and species differentiation. Set consists of bonobo, chimpanzee, gibbon, gorilla, human and orangutan skulls... |
BCM-186-D | Disarticulated Human Fetal Skull Full Term 40 Weeks | This disarticulated skull is from a full term (10 lunar months) fetus. It was part of a medical examiner's comparative pathology collection before coming to the Maxwell Museum and is remarkable in its completeness... |
BCM-801 | Human Female Skull with Down syndrome | Skull from a 66-year-old female who had Trisomy 21 (Down syndrome). This information was documented at the time of the individual's death. There is evidence of temporomandibular joint (TMJ) disease on the left side... |
BCM-802 | Human Female Partial Skull with Shotgun Pellets Embedded | Skull of a 39-year-old European American female, who died due to a shotgun wound to the head. This information was documented at the time of the individual's death. The skull shows damage from the wound, including pellets imbedded in the bone... |
BCM-803 | Human Native American Female Skull exhibiting Trauma and Hyperostosis frontalis | This skull is from a Native American female who died when hit by an 18-wheel truck. This information was documented at the time of the individual's death... |
BCM-804 | Human Human Skull for Facial Reconstruction | The Bone Clones® Facial Reconstruction Skull offers a unique opportunity to students and professionals alike to test their skills and knowledge. The skull comes with a cast of this individual's actual dentures, which are removable... |
BH-001 | Australopithecus afarensis Skull | 2.9 to 3.6 MYA. Australopithecus afarensis Skull. The australopithecines are only known from Africa and are believed to be the earliest known true hominids. None has ever been found in Europe or Asia... |
![]() BH-002 | 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, Kenya, and described by R. Leakey in Nature in 1973. There is still controversy about this specimen's classification... |
![]() BH-003 | Australopithecus robustus Skull | 1.5 to 2 MYA. The Australopithecus robustus Skull SK-48 was discovered by Fourie in Swartkrans, South Africa in 1950 and described by R. Broom in 1952. SK-48, formerly called Paranthropus crassidens, greatly increased what is known about australopithecines... |
![]() BH-003-C | Australopithecus robustus Skull with Lower Jaw BH-003-C | The mandible that is pictured here with the skull was constructed on the basis of Robert Broom's additional discovery of SK 23 at Swartkrans. SK 23, the best preserved mandible from this area, was found close to the discovery site of SK 48... |
BH-004 | Homo heidelbergensis Skull - Broken Hill 1, (Rhodesian Man) | 125,000 to possibly 400,000 YA. The Homo heidelbergensis Skull Broken Hill 1 (Rhodesian Man) was discovered in Kabwe, Zambia (formerly Rhodesia), by miner T. Zwigelaar and originally described by A. Woodward in 1921... |
BH-005 | Homo erectus Skull - Peking Man | 300,000 to 600,000 YA. The Homo erectus Skull Peking Man is also known as Pithecanthropus pekinensis (Sinathropus). The original reconstruction was prepared by Dr. F. Weidenreich and Mrs. Lucille Swan in 1937 from the fossil remains of several different individuals... |
BH-006 | Australopithecus boisei Skull - 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. This discovery helped to shed light on the controversial hypothesis that all australopithecines were of the same species... |
BH-007 | Australopithecus africanus Skull - Sts 5, "Mrs. Ples" | Reconstruction by Bone Clones® 2007. 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.. |
BH-007-C | Australopithecus africanus Skull Sts 5 Mrs. Ples with Lower Jaw | Reconstruction by Bone Clones® 2007. Considered to have lived 5 MYA, the Australopithecus africanus Skull STS 5 "Mrs. Ples" was discovered in 1947 by R. Broom and J. Robinson... |
BH-008 | Australopithecus aethiopicus Skull - KNM-WT 17000 | 2.5 MYA. The Australopithecus aethiopicus Skull KNM-WT 17000 was discovered by A. Walker in 1985 on the west shore of Lake Turkana in northern Kenya. It was described by Walker, Leakey, Harris and Brown in Nature in 1986... |
BH-009 | Homo neanderthalensis Skull - La Chapelle-aux-Saints | 50,000 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 Neandertal skull found at the time... |
BH-010 | Homo habilis Skull - 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. This nearly complete but very badly crushed specimen constituted the oldest hominid found in Olduvai Gorge... |
BH-011 | Homo ergaster Skull - KNM-ER 3733 | 1.75 MYA. The Homo ergaster Skull KNM-ER 3733 with dentition was discovered by B. Ngeneo in 1975 in Koobi Fora, Kenya, and described by R. Leakey in Nature in 1976. Several teeth are intact, but no mandible was ever found... |
BH-012 | Homo ergaster Skull KNM-WT 15000 | 1.6 MYA. The Homo ergaster Skull KNM-WT 15000 "Nariokotome Boy" or "Turkana Boy" was discovered by K. Kimeu in 1984 in Nariokotome, Kenya. It was first described by Brown, Harris, R. Leakey and Walker in Nature in 1985 as H. erectus... |
![]() BH-013 | Homo rudolfensis Skull - KNM-ER 1470 | 1.8 to 1.9 MYA. The Homo rudolfensis Skull KNM-ER 1470 was discovered by B. Ngeneo in 1972 at Koobi Fora in Kenya and described by R. Leakey in Nature in 1973... |
BH-014 | Piltdown Man Skull, 1912 Fraud | Piltdown Man Skull 1912 Fraud. 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... |
![]() BH-015 | Australopithecus boisei Skull - OH 5, (Zinjanthropos) | 1.8 MYA. The Australopithecus boisei Skull, NUTCRACKER MAN, 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... |
BH-015-C | Australopithecus boisei Skull KNM OH 5 Zinjanthropus With Jaw | Bone Clones® Australopithecus boisei Skull with Jaw. Jaw is spring attached to palate, allowing ease in handling. Springs easily attached and detached.... |
BH-016 | Australopithecus africanus Skull, Taung Child | 2.3 MYA. The Australopithecus africanus Skull (Taung Child) was discovered by M. de Bruyn in Taung, South Africa in 1924. Anatomy professor Raymond Dart identified this juvenile skull as a new genus and species of hominid in 1925 in Nature... |
![]() BH-017 | Cro-Magnon-1 Skull | 30,000 to 32,000 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... |
BH-017-C | Cro-Magnon-1 Skull and Jaw | 30,000 to 32,000 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... |
BH-018 | Homo erectus Skull - Sangiran 17 | Older than 1 MYA and possibly as old as 1.6 MYA. The Homo erectus Skull Sangiran 17 was discovered in 1969 by Mr. Towikromo in Java, Indonesia, and first described in 1971 by S. Sartono as Pithecanthropus erectus (Pithecanthropus 8).. |
![]() BH-019 | Homo neanderthalensis Skull - La Ferrassie 1 | 50,000 YA. The Homo neanderthalensis Skull La Ferrassie 1 was discovered in France in 1909 and described that same year by Capitan and Peyrony. A more thorough study of the La Ferrassie skeleton was published in 1976 by Heim... |
BH-020 | Kenyanthropus platyops Skull - KNM-WT-40000 | 3.5 MYA. The Kenyanthropus platyops Skull KNM-WT-40000 was discovered in 1999 by J. Erus, a member of Meave Leakey's team, west of Lake Turkana, Kenya. In 2001 Leakey, et al. described the specimen in Nature... |
BH-021-A | Australopithecus afarensis Skull - "Lucy", light finish | Australopithecus afarensis Skull "Lucy", (light finish) BH-021-A. Boneclones® is proud to offer our first original reconstruction. We began with exact sculpted replicas of the original jaw and skull fragments... |
BH-021-T | Australopithecus afarensis Skull - "Lucy", dark finish | Australopithecus afarensis Skull "Lucy" (dark finish) BH-021-T. Boneclones® is proud to offer our first original reconstruction. We began with exact sculpted replicas of the original jaw and skull fragments... |
![]() BH-022 | Homo heidelbergensis Skull Atapuerca 5 | 350,000 to 500,000 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... |
![]() BH-023 | Proconsul africanus Skull | 14 to 23 MYA. The Proconsul africanus Skull was discovered by Mary Leakey in 1948 on Rusinga Island, Kenya. This specimen, based on the 1948 Leakey discovery, is the most complete Proconsul africanus cranium to date... |
BH-024 | Sivapithecus Skull | 8.5 to 12.5 MYA. The Sivapithecus indicus Skull was discovered in 1979 by D. Pilbeam and S.M. Ibrahim Shah on the Potwar Plateau, Pakistan. This specimen consists of a nearly complete mandible (with complete dentition) and the left side of the face... |
BH-025 | Aegyptopithecus zeuxis Skull | 29 MYA. The Aegyptopithecus zeuxis skull was first discovered in the Egyptian Faiyum Depression by E. Simons' team in 1966. A. zeuxis is probably the best known of the propliopithecids (believed to be an ancestor of Old World monkeys and hominoids)... |
BH-026 | Female Australopithecus boisei Skull | 1.7 MYA. Female. The Australopithecus boisei Skull KNM ER 732 was discovered in 1970 at Koobi Fora, Kenya by R. Leakey and H. Mutua and described in Nature in 1971... |
![]() BH-027 | Homo neanderthalensis (Child) Skull Teshik-Tash | 70,000 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... |
![]() BH-028 | Dmanisi Homo erectus Skull | 1.75 -2.0 MYA. The Dmanisi Homo erectus (ergaster) was discovered in 1999 by Abesalom Vekua, et al. in Dmanisi, Georgia. Our cast comprises the D2700 cranium and D2735 jaw. This small-brained specimen, found alongside Oldowan-like choppers and scrapers... |
BH-029 | Sahelanthropus tchadensis Skull | 6-7 MYA. The Sahelanthropus tchadensis skull was discovered by Michael Brunet's team in Chad in 2001 and described in Nature in 2002. Some suggest that S. tchadensis existed near the time that hominids and apes separated on their evolutionary paths... |
![]() BH-030 | Homo neanderthalensis Skull - Sawyer/ Maley Reconstruction | Available exclusively from Bone Clones®, this Neanderthal Skull Reconstruction was reconstructed by Anthropologist Gary J. Sawyer, of the American Museum of Natural History and Blaine C. Maley, Anthropology Department, Washington University... |
![]() BH-031 | Homo antecessor Skull | 800,000 YA. The Homo antecessor skull was discovered in 1995 by J. M. Bermudez de Castro at the Gran Dolina site, in Atapuerca, Spain, and described in Science in 1997... |
![]() BH-032 | Homo sapiens Skull Skhul 5 | 100,000 YA. The Homo sapiens Skull Skhul 5 was discovered by T. McCown near Mount Carmel, Israel in 1932. McCown first described the skull in 1936 in the Bulletin American School of Prehistoric Research (Issue 12)... |
BH-033 | Homo floresiensis Skull | 18,000 YA. The Homo floresiensis Skull (Flores Skull LB1) was discovered by P. Brown and his team on the island of Flores, Indonesia, in 2003 and reported in Nature in 2004... |
BH-034 | Homo habilis KNM-ER 1813 Sawyer/Deak Reconstruction | Composite reconstruction by the Forensic Fossil Hominid team of G. J. Sawyer and Viktor Deak as part of their research in the production of their book, The Last Human, A Guide to 22 Species of Extinct Humans... |
BH-035 | A. africanus Sts 71 | 2.5 MYA. A. africanus Sts 71 was discovered by R. Broom and J. Robinson in 1947 at Sterkfontein, South Africa, and described by Broom and Robinson in the American Journal of Physical Anthropology in 1949... |
BHK-001 | A robustus SK-54 Cranium Section with Punctures | Australopithecus Robustus SK-54 Juvenile cranium section, dated at 1.5 Million years was discovered in 1949 Swartkrans, South Africa by Robert Broom and J.T. Robinson. This juvenile calotte (skull cap) possesses two 6mm puncture wounds... |
CB-06 | Homotherium cf. crenatidens Skull | The genus Homotherium comprises a unique group of saber tooth cats. Besides having their front limbs longer than the rear... |
CB-07 | Eusmilus sicarius Skull | Eusmilus sicarius Skull CB-07 (Sinclair & Jepsen 1927).....Occurrence: Mid-Whitneyan to early Arikareean (30,5-28.5 MYBP)... |
CB-15 | Hoplophoneus dakotensis Skull | Hoplophoneus dakotensis Skull CB-15 (Hatcher,1895).......Occurrence: Whitneyan to early Arikareean (31-28 MYBP), South Dakota. Slightl ... |
CB-17 | Hoplophoneus occidentalis Skull In Matrix | Hoplophoneus occidentalis Skull In Matrix CB-17 (Leidy, 1869)....Occurrence: Orellan-Whitneyan (33-30.5 MYBP), South Dakota... |
CB-18 | Hoplophoneus occidentalis Skull | Hoplophoneus occidentalis Skull CB-18 (Leidy, 1869)....Occurrence: Orellan-Whitneyan (33-30.5 MYBP), South Dakota... |
![]() CB-19 | Hoplophoneus primaevus Skull In Matrix | The type Hoplophoneus primaevus belongs to a group of Oligocene sabertooth cats... |
CB-20 | Megantereon nihowanensis Skull | A more complete skull than our BC-106 Chinese Sabertooth Cat, this Megantereon nihowanensis skull has both sabers... |
CN-01 | T-rex Skull 1/9 Scale | Commissioned by Black Hills Institute of Geological Research and modeled from their T-rex Stan, BHI-3033, Bone Clones® spared no effort to duplicate this extraordinary skull... |
KO-186-020-SET | Human Fetal Full Term Cranial Set | Our premium fetal skull set of 3 bones showing all the foramina, canals, etc. and minute details of the original bone... |
KO-191-20-SET | Human Sphenoid, Ethmoid, and Temporal Bone Set | Our premium anatomical skull set of 3 bones showing all the foramina, canals, etc. and minute details of a real skull... |
S-81 | Plastic Case For Human and Great Ape Skulls | Durable and economical storage and carry case for natural bone and replica human skulls. This case is suitable for Bone Clones Great Ape and Hominid skull replicas as well... |
S-91 | Premium Carrying Case for Human Skull | The Premium Carrying Case for Human Skull is a durable storage and carrying case for natural bone and replica human skulls. This case is both attractive and resilient... |