Given the plethora of existing information and exciting new finds, it was difficult to choose which to produce. Our decision was based partly on those skulls that we felt would be of particular interest to the educational community and that would represent the most important finds and various time periods of hominid evolution.
We continue our effort to sculpt new finds as they occur, leaving time for original papers to be published and enough scientific data to be obtained so we may re-create our casts as precisely as we are able.
Each hominid is carefully researched and re-created based on some or all of the following: casts of original fossils, the latest literature (descriptions and/or published measurements), input from the scientific community, and full color, life-size photographs, or some combination thereof. All of our Bone ClonesŪ hominids are produced with a custom formulated, high grade, polyurethane resin, which simulates the subtle delicacy of natural bone, yet is extremely durable and resists breakage and chipping. Every effort has been made to re-create anatomical details of color, size, shape, reconstructed areas, and bone/fossil texture.
The hominids offered in this series are high quality, artistic recreations that can be advantageously used by educators as important visual aids in the classroom and appreciated by the general public. They are not intended for advanced graduate work or to be measured for research purposes. Special thanks to our paleoanthropologist consultants Dr. Bruce Gelvin of Cal State University, Northridge and Dr. Joseph Miller of UCLA.
We welcome any comments and requests as we plan to continue improving our Bone ClonesŪ Hominid Series, adding hominids from time to time.
 Catalog # | Product Name | Description |
 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-141 | Meganthropus Skull | Reconstruction by Dr. Grover Krantz, based on Sangirin 31. Licensed exclusively to Bone ClonesŪ by the estate of Grover Krantz. More information on Meganthropus and Dr. Krantz to come... |
 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... |
 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 without lower jaw | 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 ClonesŪ 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 ClonesŪ 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, "Nariokotome boy" | 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 ClonesŪ 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. BoneclonesŪ 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. BoneclonesŪ 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 ClonesŪ, 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... |
 BH-KRO-1 | Set of 9 Fossil Hominid Skulls | 9 milestone discoveries representing a timeline of, and the diversity in, human lineage... |
 BH-KRO-2 | Fossil Hominid Set of 6 skulls | Hominid Set of 6 skulls. We organized this set to represent a range of Fossil Hominids based on age and historical importance... |
 BH-KRO-3 | Set of 7 Primate Skulls | The full sized companion set to our KAM-SET-7 set of Half Scale Primate Skulls consists of human, gorilla, and chimp Bone Clones replica skulls cast from original bone, and Australopithecus boisei, Australopithithicus afarensis, Homo erectus and Homo neanderthalensis Bone Clones... |
 COMP-107 | Neanderthal and Modern Homo sapiens Comparative Set | Contains our Modern Human Pelvis, Femur and Humerus and our new Neanderthal Pelvis, Femur and Humerus. An excellent, economical way to study the modern Homo sapiens and Homo neanderthalensis... |
 CX-02 | Introduction to Forensic Anthropology | This new text offers comprehensive coverage of all the major topics in the field of forensics with accuracy, intensity, and clarity. Students will rejoice in the thoughtful pedagogy that leads them step by step through the most current and detailed forensic anthropology text to date!... |
 CX-08 | From Lucy to Language | In 1974 in a remote region of Ethiopia, Donald Johanson discovered "Lucy," the oldest, best-preserved skeleton of any erect-walking human ever found. This discovery prompted a complete reevaluation of previous evidence for human origins... |
 KAM-SET-7 | Set of 7 Primate Half Scale Skulls | Complete set includes: Homo sapiens, Homo neanderthalensis, Homo erectus, Australopithecus boisei, Australopithecus afarensis, chimpanzee and gorilla. Wonderfully detailed miniatures of 7 primate skulls sculpted by Steve Wagner... |
 KAM-01 | Australopithecus boisei Half Scale Skull | Nicknamed Nutcracker Man or Zinj, Australopithecus boisei was discovered by Dr. Mary Leakey in 1959 at Olduvai Gorge, Tanzania. Marys husband, Louis Leakey... |
 KAM-02 | Australopithecus afarensis Half Scale Skull | Australopithecus afarensis or southern ape of Afar, first appeared approximately 4 million years ago in the area that is now East Africa and disappeared around 3 mya... |
 KAM-03 | Chimpanzee Half Scale Skull | The chimpanzee fossil record is poor, but DNA evidence suggests that humans and chimpanzees shared a common ancestor around 6 million years ago... |
 KAM-04 | Gorilla Half Scale Skull | The gorilla (Gorilla gorilla) is the largest living representative of the great apes, though there are larger apes in the fossil record. Like all great apes, the fossil record is poor for gorillas... |
 KAM-05 | Homo erectus Half Scale Skull | When Dr. Eugene Dubois discovered the first Homo erectus fossils in Java in 1891, he named the species Pithecanthropus erectus, the ape-man who walks upright... |
 KAM-06 | Homo sapiens neanderthalensis Half Scale Skull | Whether you call Homo neanderthalensis, Homo sapiens neanderthalensis is also used, a Neanderthal or a Neandertal (both spellings exist), you are describing a group of ancient people who lived in Europe and the Near East around 120,000 to 30,000 years ago... |
 KAM-07 | Homo sapiens Half Scale Skull | The modern human, Homo sapiens, wise man, may have evolved in Africa about 100,000 years ago. Migrations to Europe, Asia and the Americas followed... |
 KO-036-C | Australopithecus afarensis, "Lucy", cranium fragments | Australopithecus afarensis, "Lucy", cranium fragments KO-036-C .Discovered by Donald Johanson in 1974 in Ethiopia, "Lucy", at 3.2 million years, has ... |
 KO-036-F | Australopithecus afarensis, "Lucy", femur | Australopithecus afarensis, "Lucy", femur KO-036-F Discovered by Donald Johanson in 1974 in Ethiopia, "Lucy", at 3.2 million yea ... |
 KO-036-J | Australopithecus afarensis, "Lucy", jaw | Australopithecus afarensis, "Lucy" A.L. 288-1, jaw KO-036-J. Discovered by Donald Johanson in 1974 in Ethiopia, "Lucy", at 3.2 mil ... |
 KO-036-P | Australopithecus afarensis, "Lucy", Innominate | A.afarensis "Lucy" A.L. 288-1 -KO-036-P. 1/2 innominate. Discovered by Donald Johanson in 1974 in Ethiopia, "Lucy", at 3.2 mill ... |
 KO-36-PF | Australopithecus afarensis, "Lucy", bones, set of 5 | 1/2 Pelvis, Sacrum and Femur in 3 parts - set has 5 pieces total. Set from the Australopithecus afarensis A.L. 288-1 skeleton known as Lucy. Discovered by Donald Johanson in 1974 in Ethiopia Lucy, at 3.2 million years, has been considered the first human... |
 KO-036-PS | Australopithecus afarensis, "Lucy" - Innominate & sacrum | Australopithecus afarensis, "Lucy" Innominate & Sacrum KO-036-PS. Discovered by Donald Johanson in 1974 in Ethiopia, "Luc ... |
 KO-036-S | Australopithecus afarensis, "Lucy", sacrum | Australopithecus afarensis, "Lucy" A.L. 288-1, sacrum KO-036-S. Discovered by Donald Johanson in 1974 in Ethiopia, "Lucy", at 3.2 ... |
 KO-077 | Neanderthal Atlas Reconstruction | Available exclusively from Bone ClonesŪ, this Neanderthal Atlas Reconstruction was reconstructed by Anthropologist Gary J. Sawyer, of the American Museum of Natural History and Blaine C. Maley, Anthropology Department, Washington University... |
 KO-078 | Neanderthal Clavicle Reconstruction | Available exclusively from Bone ClonesŪ, this Neanderthal Clavicle Reconstruction was reconstructed by Anthropologist Gary J. Sawyer, of the American Museum of Natural History and Blaine C. Maley, Anthropology Department, Washington University... |
 KO-079 | Neanderthal Thorax Assembly Reconstruction | Available exclusively from Bone ClonesŪ, this Neanderthal Thorax Assembly Reconstruction was reconstructed by Anthropologist Gary J. Sawyer, of the American Museum of Natural History and Blaine C. Maley, Anthropology Department, Washington University... |
 KO-080 | Neanderthal Scapula Reconstruction | Available exclusively from Bone ClonesŪ, this Neanderthal Scapula Reconstruction was reconstructed by Anthropologist Gary J. Sawyer, of the American Museum of Natural History and Blaine C. Maley, Anthropology Department, Washington University... |
 KO-081 | Neanderthal Pelvis Reconstruction | Available exclusively from Bone ClonesŪ, this Neanderthal Pelvis Reconstruction was reconstructed by Anthropologist Gary J. Sawyer, of the American Museum of Natural History and Blaine C. Maley, Anthropology Department, Washington University... |
 KO-082 | Neanderthal Femur Reconstruction | Available exclusively from Bone ClonesŪ, this Neanderthal Femur Reconstruction was reconstructed by Anthropologist Gary J. Sawyer, of the American Museum of Natural History and Blaine C. Maley, Anthropology Department, Washington University... |
 KO-083 | Neanderthal Humerus Reconstruction | Available exclusively from Bone ClonesŪ, this Neanderthal Humerus Reconstruction was reconstructed by Anthropologist Gary J. Sawyer, of the American Museum of Natural History and Blaine C. Maley, Anthropology Department, Washington University... |
 KO-084 | Neanderthal Pelvis Femur and Humerus Set | Available exclusively from Bone ClonesŪ, this Neanderthal Pelvis Femur and Humerus Set Reconstruction was reconstructed by Anthropologist Gary J. Sawyer, of the American Museum of Natural History and Blaine C. Maley, Anthropology Department, Washington University... |
 KO-085 | Neanderthal Skull Pelvis Femur and Humerus Set | Available exclusively from Bone ClonesŪ, this Neanderthal Skull Pelvis Femur and Humerus Set Reconstruction was reconstructed by Anthropologist Gary J. Sawyer, of the American Museum of Natural History and Blaine C. Maley, Anthropology Department, Washington University... |
 KO-086 | Neanderthal Hand Reconstruction | Available exclusively from Bone ClonesŪ, this Neanderthal Hand Reconstruction was reconstructed by Anthropologist Gary J. Sawyer, of the American Museum of Natural History and Blaine C. Maley, Anthropology Department, Washington University... |
 KO-087 | Neanderthal Foot Reconstruction | Available exclusively from Bone ClonesŪ, this Neanderthal Foot Reconstruction was reconstructed by Anthropologist Gary J. Sawyer, of the American Museum of Natural History and Blaine C. Maley, Anthropology Department, Washington University... |
 KO-088 | Neanderthal Patella Reconstruction | Available exclusively from Bone ClonesŪ, this Neanderthal Patella Reconstruction was reconstructed by Anthropologist Gary J. Sawyer, of the American Museum of Natural History and Blaine C. Maley, Anthropology Department, Washington University... |
 KO-089 | Neanderthal Radius Reconstruction | Available exclusively from Bone ClonesŪ, this Neanderthal Radius Reconstruction was reconstructed by Anthropologist Gary J. Sawyer, of the American Museum of Natural History and Blaine C. Maley, Anthropology Department, Washington University... |
 KO-090 | Neanderthal Ulna Reconstruction | Available exclusively from Bone ClonesŪ, this Neanderthal Ulna Reconstruction was reconstructed by Anthropologist Gary J. Sawyer, of the American Museum of Natural History and Blaine C. Maley, Anthropology Department, Washington University... |
 KO-091 | Neanderthal Tibia and Fibula Reconstruction | Available exclusively from Bone ClonesŪ, this Neanderthal Tibia and Fibula Reconstruction was reconstructed by Anthropologist Gary J. Sawyer, of the American Museum of Natural History and Blaine C. Maley, Anthropology Department, Washington University... |
 KO-135 | Neanderthal Hyoid | This specimen is based on the 1983 discovery in Kebara Cave, Israel and is virtually identical to the hyoid bones found in modern humans. This important discovery demonstrates that Neanderthals had the capacity for speech and possibly language... |
 KO-136 | Australopithecus anamensis Cranial and Postcranial Set | First described by Leakey, et.al. in 1995, additional specimens were described by Leakey, et.al. in 1998. A complete morphology by Ward, Leakey and Walker was published in 2001 in the Journal of Human Evolution Volume 41, Issue 4, October 2001, Pages 255-368. The fossils described all date between 3.9 and 4.4 MYA... |
 KO-195-PD | Australopithecus africanus Pelvis and Sacrum | 2.3 MYA Disarticulated Australopithecus africanus Pelvis and Sacrum... |
 KO-196 | Homo Habilis OH 7 Jaw | 1.7 MYA. The Homo habilis Mandible OH 7 was discovered by J. Leakey in 1960 at Olduvai Gorge, Tanzania, and described by Leakey, Tobias, and Napier in Nature in 1964... |
 KO-312-P | Homo ergaster pelvis assembly - KNM-WT 15000 | Homo ergaster KNM-WT 15000 Pelvis Assembly KO-313-P. From our H. ergaster skeleton... |
 MS-100-6 | Set of 6 Neanderthal Mousterian Tools | This set of 6 artifacts includes sample awls, axes, knives, scrapers, cores and a hammer from our complete collection of 21 Neanderthal Mousterian tools collected between 2000 and 2004 in Romania. An excellent partial collection of hominid tools at a lesser price than the individual specimens purchased separately... |
 MS-100-SET | Set of 21 Neanderthal Tools | This set of 21 tools, which includes awls, axes, knives, scrapers, cores and hammer, was collected between 2000 and 2004 in Romania. While collectors searched the hundreds of caves in the Romanian Valley looking for fossil cave bears, these tools were discovered. According to Steve Wilson, who once owned the originals.... |
 MS-001 | Fossil Hominid Tool Banded Flint Hand-Axe | Acheulian Banded Hand-Axe (Flint), South West Morocco. An excellent example of the primitive knapping skills of early man... |
 MS-002 | Fossil Hominid Tool Bi-facial Hand-Axe | Mousterian, Roy-en-Somme dept. France, 40,000 - 120,000 year old, Neandertal Triangular, Bi-facial Hand-Axe.... |
 MS-003 | Fossil Hominid Tool Levallois Blade | Mousterian, Verberie Oise dept. France. Distinct from Acheulian; Bi-facial ovate point on a Levallois Blade.... |
 MS-004 | Fossil Hominid Tool Bi-facial Hand-Axe | Mid Acheulian, Montealeure Del Castillo Albacete province of Spain. Cordiform Bi-facial Hand-Axe.... |
 MS-005 | Fossil Hominid Tool Scraper | Mousterian Cairo, Egypt 40,000 year old scraper... |
 MS-006 | Fossil Hominid Tool Bi-facial Hand-Axe | Acheulian, Fo. Ergtitersine, Libia, - 250,000 BC.... |
 MS-99-SET | Fossil Hominid Tools set of 6 | Set of 6 fossil hominid tools which includes both Acheulian and Mousterian... |
 MS-201-SET | Set of 6 Fossil Hominid Tools | This set of 6 artifacts, includes hand axes, choppers, a cleaver and spheroid tool from Africa, dated from 1.5 mya to 1.2 mya. An excellent collection of hominid tools at a lesser price then the individual specimens purchased separately... |
 MS-220 | Farpoint Clovis Spear Point | The 8-inch Farpoint Clovis spearpoint was found in 2005 by Edgar Perez at a residential construction site in Malibu. The first such artifact found on the West Coast... |
 PE-01 | Lucy Poster | Poster of Australopithecus afarensis A.L.288-1 "Lucy". Discovered by Donald Johanson in 1974 in Ethiopia, "Lucy", at 3.2 million years has been considered the first human... |
 SC-012-A | Articulated Homo ergaster Skeleton | Bone ClonesŪ original reconstruction using previously prepared parts from our disarticulated version and adding some bones, such as all the neck vertebrae along with brass parts to indicate missing parts... |
 SC-012D | Disrticulated Homo ergaster Skeleton, KNM-WT 15000 "Nariokotome Boy" | This Homo ergaster skeleton was discovered in 1984 in Nariokotome, Kenya by Richard Leakey (and described as H. erectus). This is the first skeleton dated before 100,000 years that is complete enough to get accurate measurements... |
 SC-012-F | Homo ergaster Femur | Homo ergaster Femur SC-012-F. From our skeleton KNM-WT 15000, SC-012. Please see below. ... |
 SC-012-PF | Homo ergaster pelvis and femur - KNM-WT 15000 | Homo ergaster pelvis and femur- KNM-WT 15000- SC-012-PF. From our Homo ergaster Skeleton SC-012. See below. ... |
 SC-019 | Articulated Neanderthal Skeleton | Available exclusively from Bone ClonesŪ, this Neanderthal skeleton was reconstructed by Anthropologist Gary J. Sawyer, of the American Museum of Natural History and Blaine C. Maley, Anthropology Department, Washington University... |
 SC-019-D | Disarticulated Neanderthal Skeleton | Available exclusively from Bone ClonesŪ, this Neanderthal skeleton was reconstructed by Anthropologist Gary J. Sawyer, of the American Museum of Natural History and Blaine C. Maley, Anthropology Department, Washington University... |
 SC-019-PF | Neanderthal Pelvis Femur Reconstruction | Available exclusively from Bone ClonesŪ, this Neanderthal Neanderthal Pelvis Femur Reconstruction was reconstructed by Anthropologist Gary J. Sawyer, of the American Museum of Natural History and Blaine C. Maley, Anthropology Department, Washington University... |
 SC-036-A | Articulated "Lucy" Skeleton | Bone ClonesŪ original reconstruction using previously prepared parts from our disarticulated version and adding some bones, such as all the neck vertebrae along with brass parts to indicate missing parts. Sets and individual skeletal bones available... |
 SC-036D | Disarticulated Australopithecus afarensis-"Lucy", A.L.288-1-Skeleton | Discovered by Donald Johanson in 1974 in Ethiopia, "Lucy", at 3.2 million years has been considered the first human. This is now being challenged by the discovery of Kenyanthropus, described in 2001 by Leakey... |
 TS-01A | Anthropology T-shirt | Our Bone Clones® Anthropology T-shirt features images of Chimp, Hominid and Human skulls on a chocolate colored frame. T-shirt is khaki colored. 100% cotton. All shirts available in Small, Medium, Large and X-Large... |
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