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Description
There has been a longstanding tradition to use real human skeletons as educational aids in classrooms (2). The interactive nature of hands-on learning often results in the degradation of these skeletal specimens, and repairs are needed to bring them back to being fully functional. Drawing techniques from one of the few guides to restoring educational classroom skeletons {1) and museum approaches (2, 3, 5), we are able to find a method that works for three human skeletons at Dakota State University.
Publication Date
2024
Recommended Citation
Josko, Emelye and Sathoff, Andrew E., "Bones et. al: Educational Human Skeletons Restoration and Investigation" (2024). External Research Posters. 11.
https://scholar.dsu.edu/erposters/11

Comments
Presented at the Annual SD-EPSCoR Research Symposium in 2024 in Sioux Falls.