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New Tech Reveals Mastodon Secrets. Author: Larry O’Hanlon. Discovery Channel News Brief, May 4, 2005. A discussion of the use of 3DP to generate missing bones which are then cast for museum pieces. Future work will involve making mini-mastodons to use in studies of the forces involved in fighting within the herd. Reconstructing King Tut's Face. March, 2005. This a gateway page on service bureau Biomedical Modeling. Inc.'s web-site leading to several articles on the subject. Several teams worked on the project, most using conventional methods, but BM generated digital reconstructions from 1,700 CT images. The Pharaoh was classified as Caucasoid with skeletal and dentition development suggesting he was 17-18 years old at the time of death. Foul play is not suspected. The Way We Were. Author: Andy Pasternack. Computer Graphics World, September, 2002. RP can be used for reconstruction and study purposes by paleontologists and other scientists without damaging or altering the original fossils. Some remarkable reconstructions are shown, including a Neanderthal child from 50,000 years ago. Physical Models Of GIS Objects by Rapid Prototyping. Author: Wolf-Dieter Rase. ISPRS Technical Commission IV Symposium 2002; July 9 -12, 2002, Ottawa, Canada. [International Society for Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing.] An interesting paper about the use of RP to represent data in the form of a physical model for a wide variety of fields, such as population studies, economics, satellite data, etc. [PDF File format.] Volume Visualization Gets Physical. Author: Diana Phillips Mahoney. Computer Graphics World, November, 2000. The San Diego Supercomputer Center has developed a system for constructing 3D physical models for many applications from volumetric data using RP equipment.
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