Caliper for measuring human skulls, United States, 1999

Made:
1999 in Wheeling

Spreading caliper made by Paleo-Tech Instruments, Wheeling, Ilinois, United States, 1999. Used by skeletal biologists to study human remains.

Skeletal biologists use spreading calipers such as this to measure human skulls. Such measurements can provide much information about the former owner of the skull. This includes their age, sex and often their general health.

This specialist device was developed by Jim Kondrat, of Paleo-Tech Instruments. He is an anthropologist based in Wheeling, Illinois. Professionals working in forensic science can also use it.

Details

Category:
Psychology, Psychiatry & Anthropometry
Object Number:
2000-806
Materials:
steel (metal), brass (copper, zinc alloy), stainless steel, aluminium alloy and plastic (unidentified)
Measurements:
overall: 25 mm x 265 mm x 320 mm, .18kg
type:
calliper
credit:
Paleo-Tech Concepts