AbstractThe method of resonant ultrasonic spectroscopy (RUS) was evaluated for bovine bone and compared with the traditional wave transmission ultrasound method. In RUS, the resonance structure of a cubic or rectangular specimen is scanned. For some low-damping materials, a single measurement yields sufficient resonant frequencies to determine all of the anisotropic elastic constants. Bone has a high viscoelastic damping at ultrasonic frequency. Consequently, resonance peaks of a cubic specimen tend to overlap. Therefore, the usual RUS method must be modified for application to bone; even so, one cannot obtain all the elastic constants. Concurrent studies with transmission ultrasound were conducted. Results were used to generate a map of the elastic moduli vs position along the bone axis. Stiffness was greatest in the mid part of the bovine femur.