Field Guide 1966
  • Home
  • Field Guide 1966
    • Arthropods
    • Birds
    • Mammals
    • Reptiles & Amphibians
  • Incredible Animals
  • ODS Curriculum
    • Long Stations>
      • Arthropods
      • The Bat Cave
      • Birds
      • Horns & Antlers
      • Owls
      • Pelts A & B
      • Skulls
      • Sound Map
    • Short Stations>
      • Birds of Prey
      • Canines & Felines
      • Mustelidae & Mephitidae
      • Passerines
      • Primarily Prey
      • Reptiles & Amphibians
      • Rodents
      • Scavengers
    • The Hike>
      • Aplodontia
      • Bird Sounds
      • Build a Nest
      • Camouflage Trail
      • Damaged Plants
      • Decomposition
      • The Edge
      • Fox Walk & Bobcat's Breakfast
      • Pelt Squares
      • Predator vs. Prey
      • Scat
      • The Shaker Battle Game
      • Supermarket Niche
      • Tracks
      • Woodpeckers
      • Yoshio
  • Student Leaders
    • SL Teams
    • Field Study Rubric
  • Updates
  • Contact
Yoshio

Picture









Look at the long line of elk bones. Do you know the names of any of the bones you see?

Looking at these pictures of elk and deer skeletons, identify the head and tail ends of the set of real bones in front of you.

Picture
Why are the neck bones so thick?

Inspect the different bone shapes and how they fit together. As a group, see if you can make two connected spines out of the bones in the red circle.

One set of bones belongs to a deer, and one set belongs to an elk like Yoshio (only smaller). Remember to disassemble your creations when you’re done, so another group can try to put them together.
Picture

Additional Resources
Picture

Powered by Create your own unique website with customizable templates.