Each bone of each finger is drilled.
Then strung onto a metal bar, then glued into place with epoxy |
One finger finished! |
The radius and ulna of the flipper are also put together
with metal rods and held together with epoxy.
|
Welcome to the Pratt Museum's Community Gray Whale Skeleton Project In Homer, Alaska ~ July and August 2012 Where all may witness the progress (and process) as community member volunteers of Homer, Alaska, articulate a 37-foot-long gray whale skeleton.
Then strung onto a metal bar, then glued into place with epoxy |
One finger finished! |
The radius and ulna of the flipper are also put together
with metal rods and held together with epoxy.
|
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