• Explore
      Highlights
    • Popular
    • Staff picks
    • Downloadable
    • Collections
    • Blog
    • Community members
    • Sketchfab Masters
    Browse by category
    • Animals & Pets
    • Architecture
    • Art & Abstract
    • Cars & Vehicles
    • Characters & Creatures
    • Cultural Heritage & History
    • Electronics & Gadgets
    • Fashion & Style
    • Food & Drink
    • Furniture & Home
    • Music
    • Nature & Plants
    • News & Politics
    • People
    • Places & Travel
    • Science & Technology
    • Sports & Fitness
    • Weapons & Military
  • For business
    Sketchfab for Teams
    Augmented Reality
    3D Viewer
    3D eCommerce
    3D Configurators
    Find a Partner
    Pricing
    Customer Stories
  • Buy 3D Models
      Highlights
    • Best selling
    • Animated
    • PBR
    • Low poly
    • High poly
    • 3D Printable
    • 3D Scan
    Browse by category
    • Animals & Pets
    • Architecture
    • Art & Abstract
    • Cars & Vehicles
    • Characters & Creatures
    • Cultural Heritage & History
    • Electronics & Gadgets
    • Fashion & Style
    • Food & Drink
    • Furniture & Home
    • Music
    • Nature & Plants
    • News & Politics
    • People
    • Places & Travel
    • Science & Technology
    • Sports & Fitness
    • Weapons & Military
/
Cancel
loginSign UpUpload

Virginia opossum skull
3D Model

Avatar of CMNH
Cleveland Museum of Natural History
154
154 Downloads
1.7k
1663 Views
16Like
Report
Triangles: 1.3M
Vertices: 669.5k
More model information

Didelphis virginiana (Kerr, 1792)

People often misunderstand the opossum’s place in the ecosystem. They focus on the species’ more peculiar traits, such as its long snout or unique defense mechanisms, including growling, hissing, or “playing dead.” But opossums are also fascinating and beneficial.

For example, an opossum’s body temperature is too low for the rabies virus to survive, and the species is immune to numerous toxins, including snake venom. Opossums eat ticks for breakfast (or lunch, or dinner), helping to control tick populations and reduce the spread of Lyme disease. The average life span of an opossum is just 2 years; even opossums in captivity have short lives. With a small window for reproduction, they give birth to large litters. Female opossums have pouches in which to carry their young, but once they are older the babies sometimes ride on the mother’s back while she hunts.

Scanner: Artec Spider

Image by Hailey Majewski, Digital Asset Developer, CMNH

License:

CC Attribution-NonCommercialCreative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial

Learn more
Published 4 years ago
Oct 27th 2021
  • Animals & pets 3D Models
  • Science & technology 3D Models
  • museum
  • specimen
  • opossum
  • skull
  • didelphis
  • didelphis-virginiana

2 comments

You must log in to comment.
enterprise
  • Enterprise Solutions
  • 3D Configurators
  • 3D eCommerce
  • 3D Viewer
  • 3D Advertising
  • Sketchfab for Teams
  • Customer Stories
  • Pricing
ecosystem
  • Exporters
  • Importers
  • Developers & API
  • Augmented Reality
  • Virtual Reality
store
  • Buy 3D models
  • Become a Seller on Fab
  • Free 3D Models
community
  • Explore
  • Help Center
  • Education
  • Museums
  • Blog
  • Sketchfab Masters
about
  • Company
  • Careers
  • Press Kit
  • Features
  • Contact us
© 2025, Sketchfab, Inc. All rights reserved.
Terms of usePrivacy policySitemap