Piece of skull used in a trephination experiment with an obsidian knife, England, 1913

Made:
1913 in England
maker:
Thomas Wilson Parry

Piece of skull, showing hole produced by trephination with obsidian knife, experiment by Dr T. Wilson Parry, England, 1913

This piece of skull was part of a trephination experiment which used an obsidian knife. Obsidian is a naturally occurring volcanic glass. It is a hard wearing material and can cut through materials such as marble and bone. The hole produced is 19 mm in diameter. The inscriptions tells us that it took half an hour to produce the hole and that the skull belonged to a 44-year-old male. This experiment was carried out by Thomas Wilson Parry (1866-1945), an English doctor who was interested in the tools and techniques of Neolithic trephination. Parry collected skulls from around the world and experimented on them with different types of tools. It is shown here with a piece of obsidian (A652069/1).

Details

Category:
Surgery
Collection:
Sir Henry Wellcome's Museum Collection
Object Number:
A651992
Materials:
bone
Measurements:
overall: 25 mm x 100 mm x 126 mm, .08kg
type:
human remains, skull fragment and trephination
credit:
Wellcome Trust