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Study: Pterosaurs used 4 legs to lift off

"This book is remarkable in that paleontological evidence has been interpreted in light of rigorous aerodynamic theory. Chatterjee and Templin make a perfect team for this compelling reconstruction of prehistoric flight:" Professor James D. DeLaurier, University of Toronto Institute for Aerospace Studies and head of Project Ornithopter, which is dedicated to achieving successful flight with a piloted engine-powered flapping wing aircraft.
by Staff Writers
Baltimore (UPI) Jan 7, 2009
Dinosaur-era pterosaurs, often referred to as pterodactyls, used their "arms" as well as their legs to leap into flight, a computerized model suggests.

In fact, pterosaurs -- believed to have died off 65 million years ago in the same cataclysm that killed off the dinosaurs on land and plesiosaurs at sea -- had much stronger "arms" than legs, which is the opposite of the way birds are built, Michael Habib, a researcher at the Johns Hopkins University medical school's Center for Functional Anatomy and Evolution, wrote in a study published in the German journal Zitteliana.

"The difference between pterosaurs and birds with regard to critical mechanical properties is very, very large, especially when you're talking about the big pterosaurs," Habib said in a statement.

"As the size gets bigger, the difference gets bigger too," he said.

His model indicated that Quetzalcoatlus pterosaurs, for instance -- one of the largest known flying animals of all time, with a 35-foot wingspan -- couldn't possibly launch themselves using their hind legs alone.

But by folding their wings and balancing on their "knuckles," they could push themselves off, almost like a leap-frogging long-jump, he said.

"Then, with wings snapping out, off they'd fly," he said.

"Using all four legs, it takes less than a second to get off of flat ground, no wind, no cliffs," Habib said.

"This was a good thing to be able to do if you lived in the late Cretaceous period and there were hungry tyrannosaurs wandering around," he said.

Habib's research was funded by the Jurassic Foundation, a non-profit organization providing funding for research on dinosaur paleobiology.

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When Life On Earth Became So Big
Blacksburg VA (SPX) Jan 05, 2009
In 3.5 billion years, life on earth went from single microscopic cells to giant sequoias and blue whales. Scientists have now documented quantitatively that the increase in maximum size of organisms was not gradual, but happened in two distinct bursts "tied to the geological evolution of the planet," said Michal Kowalewski, professor of geosciences at Virginia Tech.







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