Procedure 2: Brain Dissection
If the brain is still encased in the skull, you have your work cut out for you. The best way to approach extracting it from the skull is to take a hammer and chisel and gently (at least as gently as one can with a hammer and chisel) remove it piece by piece. As you remove the skull, you will note a thick membrane holding the skull in place. This is the dura mater, and it can make removal of the skull somewhat difficult. Ideally, you would like to preserve the dura, but you may end up cutting through it as you remove the brain.
Once you have removed most of the skull, gently lift out the brain. (If you're careful, you may be able to get the brain out with the pituitary gland still attached.) You may have to loosen the remaining attachments of the dura with your finger.
Once the brain is out, note the thick part of the dura covering the longitudinal fissure. If you cut through this with scissors, you will enter the superior sagittal sinus.
Next, remove the dura to reveal the thin membrane on top of the brain. This is the arachnoid mater. Note that the pia mater follows the convolutions of the gyri and sulci.
Olfactory bulb
Gyrus
Optic nerve
Sulcus
Optic chiasm
Dura mater covering longitudinal fissure
Pituitary gland