University of Michigan Tool Provides Free 3D Views of Prehistoric Skeletons

university of michigan 3d modeling tool

A new online repository from the University of Michigan will make hundreds of 3D images of prehistoric bones available to students and the general public, with thousands more expected to be added.

The new website, the University of Michigan Online Repository of Fossils, is one of the most comprehensive paleontology collections online. Users have access to high resolution images, and can use a “BonePicker” tool to pull individual bones from a skeleton and examine photorealistic 3D versions of those bones up close. The tool already features 3D bones from mastodons and mammoths, as well as photo galleries of early whales and other vertebrates.

Fisher and his students painstakingly scanned hundreds of bones into the computer, then aligned them with a digitally scanned version of the mounted Buesching mastodon skeleton on display at the University of Michigan Museum of Natural History.

“On this website we’ll be providing 3D models that allow you to manipulate these objects onscreen and to do very much what we would do if we had the real specimen in our own hands—zoom in on it, rotate it this way and that, and even make measurements of it,” said Daniel Fisher, director of the University of Michigan Museum of Paleontology.

The project was helped along by recent advances in handheld digital scanners, browser support for 3D materials, and 3D modeling software. In addition to web version, users can also view the collection on their mobile devices.

“Simply being able to zoom in and explore all of this anatomy is an opportunity that could easily arouse interest in young scientists-to-be,” Fisher said.

About the Author

Stephen Noonoo is an education technology journalist based in Los Angeles. He is on Twitter @stephenoonoo.

Featured

  • student reading a book with a brain, a protective hand, a computer monitor showing education icons, gears, and leaves

    4 Steps to Responsible AI Implementation

    Researchers at the University of Kansas Center for Innovation, Design & Digital Learning (CIDDL) have published a new framework for the responsible implementation of artificial intelligence at all levels of education.

  • glowing digital brain interacts with an open book, with stacks of books beside it

    Federal Court Rules AI Training with Copyrighted Books Fair Use

    A federal judge ruled this week that artificial intelligence company Anthropic did not violate copyright law when it used copyrighted books to train its Claude chatbot without author consent, but ordered the company to face trial on allegations it used pirated versions of the books.

  • server racks, a human head with a microchip, data pipes, cloud storage, and analytical symbols

    OpenAI, Oracle Expand AI Infrastructure Partnership

    OpenAI and Oracle have announced they will develop an additional 4.5 gigawatts of data center capacity, expanding their artificial intelligence infrastructure partnership as part of the Stargate Project, a joint venture among OpenAI, Oracle, and Japan's SoftBank Group that aims to deploy 10 gigawatts of computing capacity over four years.

  • laptop displaying a phishing email icon inside a browser window on the screen

    Phishing Campaign Targets ED Grant Portal

    Threat researchers at cybersecurity company BforeAI have identified a phishing campaign spoofing the U.S. Department of Education's G5 grant management portal.