Humans
Homo sapiens sapiens
fa;1972;04;sh.
Hominoid Skull (fossil bone)
Though clearly an early human, this example of a hominoid skull displays noticeable canine characteristics. This Canine skull and head is an artistic representation and as such is “anthropromorphized,” or displays hominoid character traits.
Formerly catalog number 30.
compare to: Canine Bust (polystyrene)
re;018.1515;st
Wrist-Bone, (Radius) collected, 19th century. From the monastery of the Cathedral of St. Peter’s of the East, Oxford.
“Like so much that is worth seeing in Oxford, St. Peter's-in-the-East is hidden away. It is in a peaceful walled enclosure down a little lane which is like what Oxford used to be before the petrol age. Its ancient churchyard is overhung by the trees of New college garden. Its old tombstones, many of them well carved with Georgian lettering and devices, are mercifully spared much intrusion of white Victorian marble. And it preserves a village quiet. It is even older than the old buildings which surround it...The church is not merely a museum for the research of antiquarians. It is a parish church, which is, for all its remoteness, very much alive.”
—Sir John Benjamin, in his foreword to the last church guide.
fa:195:838:di
Human Skull.
Used in medical education. sawed in half with hinge. Flattened on one side.