sister / gouache
they’ve always said, when you feel a random shiver, that a rabbit has run across your future grave
(now in technicolor! happy fall equinox)
An Uninvited Guest (1844 / Watercolor, pencil & ink) - Adolph Menzel
Juan de Valdes Leal: Saint Ignatius and Saint Francis Borgia beholding an eucharistic allegory (detail), 1674.
Do you know your basic fracture types? Can you name the above fracture types just from the picture? This is a very important essential skill to have when studying archaeology and anthropology. These skills are also widely transferable to other subjects, such as forensic science and medicine. But these posts focus on the archaeological significance of the fractures, but can be used as a starting point for other disciplines.
In this Quick Tips post I will show you some ways to identify and deduce common fracture types, (Top Image), and their key characteristics. The definition of a fracture is a break in the continuity of a bone. There are three major causes of fractures: acute injury (an accident); underlying disease which then weakens the bone making it susceptible to fractures; and repeated stress (as seen in athletes).
All fracture types can be placed in two categories; open and closed. An open fracture, also known as a compound fracture, is where the bone breaks through the skin causing an open wound. It is called an open fracture as there is an open connection between the fracture site and skin. A closed fracture is where the bone has no connection between the outer skin surface and the fractured bone itself; it does not cause an open wound. A closed fracture is classed as a ‘simple fracture’. (Top image fractures) Click here to carry on reading.
In my previous Quick Tips, which you can find by clicking here, you were introduced to the first six basic types of fractures, what the main causes of fractures are, and the two main categories they are classed in. It is important that you know the information in the previous Quick Tips post before learning these last few basic fractures, as it discussed the fundamentals of fractures. (Bottom image fractures)
Click here to carry on reading.
Gallery of Paleontology and Comparative Anatomy in Paris
Gallery of Paleontology and Comparative Anatomy in Paris
Still Life with a Skull and a Vase of Roses (1645/1650 / Etching with engraving) - Jean Morin
Death and Passions Descend upon the World / La Mort et les Passions fondent sur le Monde: La Guerre de 1914 (1914 - Woodcut on Japanese paper) - Auguste Louis Lepère
Daily Pattern 5.9.11, Francesca Buchko
Human skulls from the Luigi Calori collection, Institute of Human Anatomy, Bolonga