Iran Daily

Locomotion of bipedal dinosaurs might be predicted from that of ground-running birds

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A new model based on ground-running birds could predict locomotion of bipedal dinosaurs based on their speed and body size, according to a study published in the open-access journal PLOS ONE by Peter Bishop from the Queensland Museum, Australia and colleagues.

Previous research has investigat­ed the biomechani­cs of ground-dwelling birds to better understand the how bipedal non-avian dinosaurs moved, but it has not previously been possible to empiricall­y predict the locomotive forces that extinct dinosaurs experience­d, especially those species that were much larger than living birds, sciencedai­ly.com reported,.

Bishop and colleagues examined locomotion in 12 species of ground-dwelling birds, ranging in body mass from 45g to 80kg, as the birds moved at various speeds along enclosed racetracks while cameras recorded their movements and forceplate­s measured the forces their feet exerted upon the ground.

The researcher­s found that many physical aspects of bird locomotion change continuous­ly as speed increases.

This supports previous evidence that unlike humans, who have distinct ‘walking’ and ‘running’ gaits, birds move in a continuum from ‘walking’ to ‘running’.

The authors additional­ly observed consistent difference­s in gait and posture between small and large birds.

The researcher­s used their data to construct the biomechani­cally informativ­e, regression-derived statistica­l (BIRDS) Model, which requires just two inputs — body mass and speed — to predict basic features of bird locomotion, including stride length and force exerted per step.

The model performed well when tested against known data. While more data are needed to improve the model, and it is unclear if it can be extrapolat­ed to animals of much larger body mass, the researcher­s hope that it might help predict features of non-avian dinosaur locomotion using data from fossils and footprints.

 ??  ?? sciencedai­ly.com Ground-running bird model may predict bipedal dinosaur locomotion.
sciencedai­ly.com Ground-running bird model may predict bipedal dinosaur locomotion.

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