Bone Clones

Located in Chatsworth, California, Bone Clones provides these reproductions to museums, universities, medical schools, and other educational institutions.

[2] The idea of replicating real bones out of resin casting came from the increasing demand of museums for processed skeletons.

This exhibit showcases skeletons of extinct and extant animals, inviting students and visitors to interact with otherwise inaccessible specimens.

[7] In 2012, anthropologist Richard Wright used Bone Clones cast BC-110 to train users in quality control when using his CRANID program for determining the ancestry of unidentified human remains.

[9] Bone Clones have been featured on television, numerous magazine and newspaper articles and museum exhibitions including:

European human female skeleton
Bone Clones facility in Chatsworth, California
Bone Clones showroom
How It's Made filming of Bone Clones' manufacturing process