Human Skull with battle injuries (3D scan; Historiska Museet 260727)

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Human Skull with battle injuries (3D scan; Historiska Museet 260727)

Remixed by
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Print Profile(2)

All
A1 mini
P1S
P1P
X1
X1 Carbon
X1E
A1

A1 Mini: 99 % scale, 0.2mm layer
A1 Mini: 99 % scale, 0.2mm layer
Designer
17.5 h
2 plates
5.0(1)

Fullsize Injured Skull 0.2mm layer, 2 walls, 15% infill
Fullsize Injured Skull 0.2mm layer, 2 walls, 15% infill
33.4 h
2 plates
5.0(4)

Boost
58
113
13
1
179
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Released

Description

3D scan of skull found on the Battle of Visby, where on 27th of July 1361 the Danes fought Gutnic Peasants.

The human skull found at the Battle of Visby is a grim reminder of the brutality of medieval warfare. The skull shows clear evidence of a severe axe wound to the head, likely inflicted during the battle. The wound is deep and jagged, suggesting a powerful blow delivered with significant force. The discovery of this skull offers a sobering glimpse into the violent reality of medieval warfare. It serves as a reminder of the human cost of conflict and the lasting impact that violence can have on individuals and communities.

Find further information and historical context on this specific model here:

Source / Credits:

The original model was scanned by the Swedish History Museum (Historiska museet) and published under the Title Cranium with injuries - 260727 on Sketchfab. The file was licensed under a CC-BY license.

be aware that this is not a CGI object, it is a 3D scan of a (former) living human. handle and treat it with necessary respect (so please don't remix it as tissue dispenser or doorknob)

 

Notes:

be aware that this model is intended to be an an educational model or replica for a museum/exhibision in historical context. though it is a scan or a real human skull, it is not 100 % anatomically correct (in a medical context). first of all, the intracranial cavity is solid (with the foramen magnum capped off on the inside) also, due to some degradation, smaller features are not preserved well and erroded or broken off (like parts of the nasal bone or missing teeth) or shifted to places they don't belong

Printing:

i've printend the lower jaw and skull with 0,12 mm layer height (adaptive) - skull in one piece on P1P takes about 36 hours to complete - removing the supports is a bit fiddly, but when you use organic supports, it is manageable - if you have the possibility to print with soluble supports, i highly recommend doing this - i recommend printing on a raft with a more generous interface layer spacing, to ensure the underside of the parts will be nice too

 

i thought about splitting up the model - if there is demand, i'll provide some precut / sliced files

 

Comment & Rating (13)

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Printed with bambu pla basic and painted with acrylics
The designer has replied
1
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that looks amazig - did you prime or sand it or just painted? i'm interrested
0
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Replying to @suit1337 :
I primed it with automotive filler/primer and painted it with acrylics
1
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printed really well with Esun PLA+ Bone White. skull took about 1d 16h, jaw about 3,5h. I used treesupport, it worked out well, but was a bit of pain to remove some places. (as mentioned in the description) I would recommend to use adaptive layer hight do get the best detail.
1
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Print Profile
Fullsize Injured Skull 0.2mm layer, 2 walls, 15% infill
0
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print profile plz :)
The designer has replied
0
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just added my print profile, should be up any minute unfortunately i can't add the print profile, it fails slicing in makerworld - but i added my presliced 3mf file for you to slice yourself, just open it in bambu studio and press slice all, you find it in downloads under "cranium with injuries.3mf" due to the complexity of the model, this takes ages - on my 5800X3D it took about 45 minutes to slice
(Edited)
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Replying to @suit1337 :
Thx, I think I got it :) Still new to this
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Replying to @Samarensis :
no worries, i also wrote a support ticket to Maker World - since this might also happen with other very complex models if you are new to this, i recommend printing the jaw first, to see how it goes - if the jaw prints fine, then try the skull - just make sure you have the right build plate and proper bed adhesion
0
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Print Profile
A1 Mini: 99 % scale, 0.2mm layer
0
Reply
Print Profile
Fullsize Injured Skull 0.2mm layer, 2 walls, 15% infill
0
Reply
Print Profile
Fullsize Injured Skull 0.2mm layer, 2 walls, 15% infill
0
Reply
Print Profile
Fullsize Injured Skull 0.2mm layer, 2 walls, 15% infill
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