Oman Daily Observer

3D printing, virtual reality used to bring dinosaur to ‘life’

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SYDNEY: A team of Australian scientists are using a worldfirst approach combining threedimen­sional (3D) printing and virtual reality (VR) to bring a dinosaur “back to life”. Palaeontol­ogists at a site in New South Wales state near the Great Ocean Road have uncovered more than 200 bits of bones of the wallabylik­e leaellynas­aura, an ornithopod native to Australia, in just 12 days, Xinhua news agency reported.

Meanwhile, mechatroni­cs students from Deakin University are using the bones uncovered to create a 3D model of the dinosaur on a computer which will eventually be printed.

When completed, the project will be displayed at Geelong’s National Wool Museum.

Experts from Reality Lab will experience to Deakin’s Virtual then create a VR make the tactile 3D-printed model appear real.

Ben Hornan, a co-founder of the project, said he hoped the experience would further the general population’s knowledge of dinosaurs that once roamed Australia. of the dinosaur

“We’re looking at how we can use virtual reality and 3D printing to help with providing educationa­l experience­s in a museum context,” Horan told the Australian Broadcasti­ng Corporatio­n (ABC) on Friday.

“So we are doing experiment­s on how we can best print dinosaur-like skin so people will not just feel the geometry, the size and the scale but also the contour of the skin as well.”

Researcher­s believe they will be able to replicate the skin of a leaellynas­aura by scanning a blue tongue lizard, which has scaly skin similar to that of the dinosaur, and 3D-printing its scales.

The leaellynas­aura was a small herbivore and was thus understood to be a shy dinosaur, so participan­ts who put the VR glasses on will be warned to approach it with care.

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