Raccoon Skull by Dawn Carr
Scientific illustration study (2/5)
*his name is Guillermo, he has all his teeth and he’s my favorite.

JVL
we're not kids anymore.
todays bird
Three Goblin Art

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Peter Solarz
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH

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shark vs the universe
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trying on a metaphor

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@os-sphenoidale
Raccoon Skull by Dawn Carr
Scientific illustration study (2/5)
*his name is Guillermo, he has all his teeth and he’s my favorite.
Giraffe neck vertebrae.
Image from page 37 of “The teeth in health and disease” (1902)
Probably one of my favorite bone hunting finds, was this cow skeleton. All the pieces were partially sunken into the ground. Somehow this half of the rib cage stuck straight out. Almost a foot out of the ground, like an art installation. I seriously must’ve taken 50 pictures from different angles.
Wombat skull
Agneau sternopage.
“The Unfeathered Bird” / Katrina van Grouw
Little Penguin
gibbon skeleton
Halfway finished Smilodon skeleton. Sadly, it will probably remain like this.
Hydrocephalus
The term hydrocephalus derived from the Greek words “hydro” meaning water and “cephalus” meaning head. As the name implies, it is a condition in which the primary characteristic is excessive accumulation of fluid in the brain.
Mossy the coyote. When I first skinned him I thought he was an older coyote because of how his teeth looked, but his bones tell a different story and he is actually quite young. I don’t know how he managed to mess his teeth up like that.
Veau Iniodyme.
Anatomical plates, arranged as a companion volume for “The essentials of anatomy”
By Ranney, Ambrose L. (Ambrose Loomis), 1848-1905
Publication info New York,Putnam’s Sons,1881.
Contributing Library: Gerstein - University of Toronto (archive.org)
BIODIV LIBRARY
Chimpanzé juvénile.