Measuring Deer Antler Volume

  • Thread starter Thread starter erobz
  • Start date Start date
erobz
Gold Member
Messages
4,454
Reaction score
1,843
TL;DR
Trying to figure out simple low-tech solution
My idea is that I want to use immerse Whitetail Antlers in a fishtank to measure their volumetric displacement (the Boone and Crockett system is the current record measurement standard to place in a juxtaposition with) I would use some sight glass plumbed into the side of the tank to get the change in height so that I can multiply by the tank cross-section. Simple Idea. But...

Is there a simple mechanical way to amplify the height in the sight glass to increase measurement precision? Nothing is jumping out at me.
 
  • Like
Likes Greg Bernhardt
Engineering news on Phys.org
Fill the tank up to an overflow point, then immerse the antler with the overflow from the tank being directed to a narrow graduated cylinder. Would that work?
 
sandy stone said:
Fill the tank up to an overflow point, then immerse the antler with the overflow from the tank being directed to a narrow graduated cylinder. Would that work?
Thank you, that technique would make precision adjustable. Also, this measures the volume directly; skipping a computation step and minimizes propagated error.

Way to think outside the box! (fishtank)
 
Last edited:
Add a drop of detergent to the water so it wets the surface of the antler and does not trap air bubbles.

What is the thermal expansion coefficient of antler volume?
Must you regulate the temperature of the antler or water?

It should not be necessary to equilibrate the temperature of the antler to the water, as the thermal mass of the water will be much greater than the sparse antler.

Identify the density variation of antler, by weighing the dry antler before measuring its volume.
 
Baluncore said:
Add a drop of detergent to the water so it wets the surface of the antler and does not trap air bubbles.

What is the thermal expansion coefficient of antler volume?
Must you regulate the temperature of the antler or water?

It should not be necessary to equilibrate the temperature of the antler to the water, as the thermal mass of the water will be much greater than the sparse antler.

Identify the density variation of antler, by weighing the dry antler before measuring its volume.
This will be a quick duration dip (done slowly as not to make waves), it won't be soaking. Just enough time for the water level to settle. But thanks for the tip about the air bubbles.

Before we get to scientific/precise, take a look at the Boone and Crockett system of scoring (https://prod10-boone-crockett.s3.am...df?VersionId=wR4JXJzq5NmoxMFcf54j.03HIMVSuah3) ; it is just a linear measurement proxy for a volume measurement.
 
If you weigh them submerged as well as in air with a good electronic scale you could get a precise volume. You'd have to make a jig to do that but it isn't particularly difficult.

Do antlers sink? You might need to add a weight. Will they absorb a significant amount of water? That could throw things off as well. Another possible option is a DIY gas pyncnometer.
 
  • Like
Likes DaveC426913
They are bone, so pretty sure they sink and are relatively impermeable over the short timescales needed to make the measurement.
 
What accuracy is needed for the measurement?
Hopefully the deer is dead by this stage.
 
The detergent also breaks the surface tension (meniscus layer) around the lip of the tank, which would otherwise interfere with run-off and results.
 
  • #10
If Eureka can, anybody can.
1764341406048.webp
 
  • #11
erobz said:
They are bone, so pretty sure they sink and are relatively impermeable over the short timescales needed to make the measurement.

I made a quick search and it seems that the density may hover around 1.0g/cm3 (see here). That would make underwater weighing problematic without adding weight. Likewise with measuring water displacement. Here's what the authors of that paper had to say about their methods:

Volumes for reference were determined by water
displacement, following a modification of the method of
Miller et al. (1985). Previously, the bases and all porous
surfaces of the antlers were varnished to exclude water from
entering internal spaces. Then the casts were submerged in an
overflowing bath with a control tube and the water displaced by
each antler was collected. The most common problems found
with this method were the difficulty of measuring large
specimens, the damage to cast appearance because of the
varnish and the floatability of casts of lower density. We
resolved the floatability problem by using an additional weight
previously submerged, with the possibility of holding the cast if
necessary.
 
  • #12
JT Smith said:
I made a quick search and it seems that the density may hover around 1.0g/cm3 (see here). That would make underwater weighing problematic without adding weight.
No need to attach weight. You finger (attached to your body, presumably) is weight enough. As long as you can submerge the test subject you should be good to go. It doesn't have to be for more than a moment.

So, essentially, you can hold it down with your finger.

Submerge it slowly, so you don't overshoot. Hold it so that every part of it is under water, without actually sticking your finger in (error here will be miniscule compared to other sources of error using this setup).


Frankly, I think your bigger problem will be collecting every drop of the overflow.
 
  • #13
DaveC426913 said:
No need to attach weight. You finger (attached to your body, presumably) is weight enough.

That may be true for measuring the displaced water but it obviously wouldn't work for underwater weighing, which is the part of my post you quoted.

They also mentioned varnishing the antlers to prevent water ingress. I guess that's not a big issue either? Maybe it comes down to how precise a measurement you're interested in.

And although it's not directly relevant here, I'm curious why antler volume is something you'd want to know about. What do you do with that number exactly?
 
  • #14
JT Smith said:
That may be true for measuring the displaced water but it obviously wouldn't work for underwater weighing, which is the part of my post you quoted.
Underwater weighing? Why would one do that?

(Actually, in theory, one could do that by measuring the weight of the water displaced by the floating antlers, then submerge them and weigh the remainder. But this would only work if they float.)

JT Smith said:
They also mentioned varnishing the antlers to prevent water ingress. I guess that's not a big issue either? Maybe it comes down to how precise a measurement you're interested in.
Exactly.
JT Smith said:
And although it's not directly relevant here, I'm curious why antler volume is something you'd want to know about. What do you do with that number exactly?
Presumably because it is the most precise way to measure the substance of an antler. They could vary a lot in density, so weight might not get the desired results.

What I'm not sure about is the same thing you ask: if no one else uses volume then what use is it? The Boone and Crockett method mentioned by the OP is about length, circumference and spread.
 
  • #15
Since the antler is bone, there will be blood vessels in the centre of the structure. The mass of blood in those vessels may be dried or may retain moisture, which will determine mass and density.

If you need an accurate volume, maybe it is time to consider a 3D laser scanner, to get a detailed external surface map of the antler.
 
  • #16
DaveC426913 said:
Underwater weighing? Why would one do that?

To determine the volume. The weight of a submerged object is equal its unsubmerged weight minus the weight of the water displaced.

Of course if you have the means to laser scan it that would be way to go.
 
  • #17
JT Smith said:
To determine the volume. The weight of a submerged object is equal its unsubmerged weight minus the weight of the water displaced.

Of course if you have the means to laser scan it that would be way to go.
I don't get it. Why not just weigh it directly?
 
  • #18
DaveC426913 said:
I don't get it. Why not just weigh it directly?

You mean the water? Because weighing the object can be more precise than weighing the water that manages to slop over the edge or down a tube or whatever. I think more so the smaller the object but I would expect it would be true with deer antlers. But it isn't clear how accurate the OP wants it to be. Which is why I was curious what the point was for knowing the volume/density in the first place.
 
  • #19
JT Smith said:
You mean the water?
No. The antlers. Why weigh them in water? Why not just ... weigh them?


JT Smith said:
Because weighing the object can be more precise than weighing the water that manages to slop over the edge or down a tube or whatever.
We must have our wires crossed. In my perception it was you who offered the idea of weighing the antlers submerged (post 11 and then 13).
I have no idea why one would do that.
 
  • #20
DaveC426913 said:
Why not just ... weigh them?

Because just weighing them won't tell you the volume.

DaveC426913 said:
In my perception it was you who offered the idea of weighing the antlers submerged (post 11 and then 13).
I have no idea why one would do that.

In order to determine the volume.
 
  • #21
JT Smith said:
Because just weighing them won't tell you the volume.

In order to determine the volume.
Right. That's what the tank is for. It's a very good (low-tech) way of determining the volume of a highly-irregular object.

It is not a very good way of determining the object's weight - not compared to simply weighing it on a scale, which has very little room for procedural or measurement errors.

Different properties require different measuring tools.
 

Similar threads

  • · Replies 1 ·
Replies
1
Views
4K
  • · Replies 6 ·
Replies
6
Views
5K
  • · Replies 5 ·
Replies
5
Views
4K
  • · Replies 1 ·
Replies
1
Views
3K