Endocast

An endocast is the internal cast of a hollow object, often referring to the cranial vault in the study of brain development in humans and other organisms.

Endocasts of the inside of the neurocranium (braincase) are often made in paleoanthropology to study brain structures and hemispheric specialization in extinct human ancestors.

The openings to the brain cavity, except for the foramen magnum, are closed, and the liquid rubber is slushed around in the empty cranial vault and then left to set.

However, scientists are increasingly utilizing computerized tomography scanning technology to create digital endocasts in order to avoid risking damage to valuable specimens.

[10] Endocasts are also known to develop from snail shells and sea urchins, and even from the stomach hollow of jellyfish, a group that rarely leaves fossil traces.

A natural endocast of the brain of the Taung Child , a young Australopithecus africanus , with the facial portion of the skull attached
Digital cranial endocast of Acrocanthosaurus , an early Cretaceous theropod
Natural (fossil) endocast of a Tyrannosaurus cranial vault, showing extensive olfactory bulb (left)
Endocast of the shell of an Ordovician straight-shelled cephalopod , showing the internal shell structure