Update:
Today, Ethan dissected the frog. His favorite dissections have
been the frog and the cow eye - bigger and easier to see everything
in them. The big brown organ is the liver and the thicker tube
under it is the stomach. The kids thought that the small
intestines looked like worms. You can do a virtual dissection
here. Cool!

We got Ethan a
dissection kit for his birthday. I'm against killing
animals just for the purpose of dissecting but Ethan has really,
really wanted to do it and I have fond memories of when I did it in
High School. I loved it!
I got them from
Carolina Biological. They tell you from where they obtain their
dissection animals (It is written in their catalog but I can't find
it written online). None are raised specifically for
dissection. Some are by-products of the meat industry and
some, like the cats, are those poor animals that were put to sleep
at animal shelters and their bodies would have just gone to waste.
Still bothers me but it's better.
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Next, Ethan decided that he wanted to
dissect the grasshopper from the
dissecting kit and the
cow's eye
the other day. The eyeball was truly fascinating! We
really enjoyed it. Gross but very interesting!! You can
do a virtual dissection and/or watch a cow eye dissection
here and a great step-by-step picture guide
here.
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This is the vitreous humor, it's a thick
gel that helps give the eyeball it's shape.
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This is the lens. You can't
quite tell in the picture but when you look through it, the image
you see is upside down, just like how your eye works and then shoots
that upside down image onto your retina for your brain to decipher.
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Here Ethan is cutting off the cornea.
It is surprisingly really thick.
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This is a cross section of the cornea.
See how thick that is?
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This is the iris. It's a muscle
that controls how much light enters the eye. You can only see
a very small portion of it from the front of the eye but when you
look from the inside, it's really big.
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Under the retina, we found this
pretty part. Doesn't it look like the inside of a shell?
The retina was just a very thin layer of black lining. This
iridescent part is called the tapetum and is found in animals with
good night vision. It's used kind of as a mirror to reflect
light back through the retina for a better chance to see in the
dark. This is why their eyes seem to glow at night.
Cool!!
The pink blob there is the optic
nerve which send the image message to the brain to decipher what is
being seen. It is also the blind spot in everyone's vision.
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This is the grasshopper.

Ethan pulled the exoskeleton off of his
leg and found the muscle. Cool!
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The grasshopper's insides are
basically all smashed together and come out as one big clump.
The big end on the right is the crop.
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Today, Ethan dissected the frog.
His favorite dissections have been the frog and the cow eye - bigger
and easier to see everything in them. The big brown organ is
the liver and the thicker tube under it is the stomach. The
kids thought that the small intestines looked like worms. You
can do a virtual dissection
here. Cool!

He opened his stomach to what if he
could see what he last ate but it was empty...poor frog.

We tried to get into his skull to see
his brain but weren't very successful...kind of mutilated it.
Oops.
