Bones
All season 10 mistakesMistakes
1The Conspiracy in the Corpse0
2The Lance to the Heart0
3The Purging of the Pundit0
4The Geek in the Guck0
5The Corpse at the Convention0
6The Lost Love in the Foreign Land0
7The Money Maker on the Merry-Go-Round0
8The Puzzler in the Pit0
9The Mutilation of the Master Manipulator1
10The 200th in the 10th0
11The Psychic in the Soup1
12The Teacher in the Books0
13The Baker in the Bits1
14The Putter in the Rough0
15The Eye in the Sky0
16The Big Beef at the Royal Diner0
17The Lost in the Found0
18The Verdict in the Victims0
19The Murder in the Middle East1
20The Woman in the Whirlpool1
21The Life in the Light0
22The Next in the Last1

The Parts in the Sum of the Whole - S5-E16

Continuity mistake: In this episode, Booth and Bones are telling Sweets about their "real first case" together - the case where they actually met for the first time. During this episode, Booth, Bones, and Angela take some evidence to Caroline, and Booth introduces them both (most importantly Brennan) to Caroline. However, in season 1, episode 19, "The Man in the Morgue", (which would have taken place after this initial first meeting) when Brennan is accused of murder in New Orleans, Booth has Caroline fly to NOLA to be Brennan's lawyer, and he introduces the two of them. If they had already been introduced during the first case Booth and Brennan worked on together, they would not have needed to be introduced here; they would have already known one another.

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Judas on a Pole - S2-E11

Trivia: Kathy Reichs, whose novels and experiences the series is based on, appears as one of the professors questioning Zack about his dissertation. (00:00:50)

Cubs Fan

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The Girl in the Mask - S4-E23

Question: When Doctor Brennan is examining the victim's skull, she states that a "straight suture across the palatine bone" indicates that the victim was a native Japanese speaker. I've studied linguistics, but I've never heard of a person's native language actually affecting their anatomy. So, for example: would a person of Japanese heritage who was born and raised in the US and spoke only English be distinguishable from a person who grew up in Japan and spoke only Japanese, purely by their palatine bones? (00:06:10)

tinsmith

Answer: Since the palatine bone is a bone that helps form the mouth it has a lot to do with speaking. The shape of it differs a lot depending on your ethnic background. I would guess that they, in the show, meant that the person's bone tells that they were Japanese and that it was "made for the purpose of speaking Japanese." That's what I'd assume anyway. I've studied molecular biology though, so I'm not an expert on bones.

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