A "wishbone" is a specific bone called the furcula.
It is found in dinosaurs, including birds.
A wishbone can be used on its own as a lucky charm, often as an amulet.
Dried goose furculae in particular are used for divination, especially foretelling the weather.
There is also the wishbone "ritual," that uses a wishbone which has been dried for 3 days.
Two people grab either end of the wishbone, make a wish, and then pull.
After the wishbone snaps, whoever has the larger part with the crest gets their wish granted.
If the crest splits in half, both wishes come true.
Also known as ossomancy or osteomancy.
This is a form of necromancy that is distinct from psychomancy/umbramancy (or spirit divination), as it uses corpses for divination.
Bone throwing is a diverse practice, often a form of cleromancy using bones.
Oracle bones from China are often made from the scapulae of oxen.
There is also the South African practice of hakata, which sometimes uses bones.
Cephalomancy is divination using skulls in particular.
Many other well-known divination methods from runes to cartomancy can use bone as a material.
A wand can be made from a femur or a humerus.
This can be taken from a particular animal, according to Hermetic correspondences.
Bone athames can be made in a diverse manner of ways.
The blade itself might be bone, or the handle alone.
Different bones and different animals can have different Hermetic correspondences.
Skulls can be used as vessels to house spirits.
These can be the spirits of the skull's former occupant, other discarnate spirits, or artificial spirits like bone golems or egregores.
Aside from spirits, skulls can be used as idols of Death.
They can also be used as pentacles, sometimes with particular markings on them.
They can also be used as focus points or mediums for divination through clairaudience.
Their dark eye sockets can be used for scrying.
The occipital bone can be removed to function as a small bowl or vessel, which can double as a ceremonial goblet or chalice.
Palmistry associations still apply to the underlying bones.
For example, the distal phalanx on the thumb is associated with Venus.
I may update this section with a custom-made chart for reference.
Hermetic correspondences for various animals can be found in Liber 777 and Agrippa's 3 Books of Occult Philosophy.
There are additional attributes of animals from European folklore that are well-known.