This summer, students used 3D printing technology to re-create the skeleton of a dinosaur at The American Museum of Natural History in New York City. Rather than studying the bones behind glass or even being allowed to handle plaster casts, these students are directly involved in the actual creation of the bones themselves. They are given a set of fossils from the museum’s collection and then shown how to create 3D models in order to fabricate the replicas. Capturing dinosaurs is the first time the museum has tried to use digital fabrication as a way to teach young people about science.
The students took anywhere from five to six thousand photos as they worked to capture all of the details in a way in which they could be turned into digital models. Those photos were used to create the approximately 150 models. While the program certainly taught the students how to use the technology to create the 3D models and prints, it also helped them to practice ‘careful seeing’, an important part not only of paleontology but also for design.
“It really taught me how paleontologists reconstruct and study dinosaurs and how they have to deal with disarticulated bones from different individuals, and broken bones.”
A ninth grade student, responding to the project said:
“I didn’t expect to see what we put together to actually come out. It was really precise…It has inspired me to maybe one day even go to college for paleontology. I always thought that I wanted to work with technology, but now after doing this I learned that I can do both of them together, then I feel that I can do this.”
Should schools themselves begin adding similar types of project to their curriculum? Let’s hear your opinions in the Dinosaur 3D printing project forum thread on 3DPB.com.