or have a congenital birth difference, where maybe their ear hasn t formed properly, that sort of thing as well. so they ve had some part of their head and neck, part of their face predominantly, they ve lost that. and it s not always possible for the surgeon to reconstruct that with their own tissue. and so that s where we step in and we re able to provide them with a prosthesis instead that replaces what s been lost. with the materials that we now have available, we can really get that life like appearance. and here, we can do the shadow of the nostrils. so you can see there all the different colours that are going in. they make around 60 prostheses a year, and have a0 ongoing patients to care for. these three magnets here will click onto implants that he has in his bone. it s a really good way of holding the prosthesis into place. we have some patients that still play football. if i was making fingers all the time, i think i d get a bit bored of making fingers. but i quite like maki
125 years later, the area became known for something else when some hunters found what looked to be a human skull. we treat it as a crime scene, making the assumption that it is going to be a homicide. nearby were bits of clothing and a woman s shoe. police sifted through the dirt and found some smaller bones and a strand of hair. forensic anthropologist dr. harrell gill-king estimated the bones had been exposed to the elements for over a year. one piece of bone at the bottom of the spine called the sacrum indicated the victim was female. the shape of the sacrum in females is distinctive. it s much more flared. it s all part of the birth
125 years later, the area became known for something else, when some hunters found what looked to be a human skull. we treat it as a crime scene, making the assumption that it is going to be a homicide. nearby were bits of clothing and a woman s shoe. police sifted through the dirt and found some smaller bones and a strand of hair. forensic anthropologist dr. harrell gill-king estimated the bones had been exposed to the elements for over a year. one piece of bone at the bottom of the spine called the sacrum indicated the victim was female. the shape of the sacrum in females is distinctive. it s much more flared. it s all part of the birth difference between females giving birth and males not.
some hunters found what looked to be a human skull. we treat it as a crime scene, making the assumption that it is going to be a homicide. nearby were bits of clothing and a woman s shoe. police sifted through the dirt and found some smaller bones and a strand of hair. forensic anthropologist dr. harrell gill-king estimated the bones had been exposed to the elements for over a year. one piece of bone called the sacrum indicated the victim was female. the shape of the sacrum in females is distinctive. it s much more flared. it s all part of the birth difference between females giving birth and males not.