blaze
Paleo-artist
Posts: 766
|
Post by blaze on Nov 18, 2016 3:12:37 GMT 5
Wait, is it just me or my links don't work?
|
|
|
Post by Infinity Blade on Nov 18, 2016 3:33:51 GMT 5
They work. I'm reading up on Hadrosaurs right now.
|
|
blaze
Paleo-artist
Posts: 766
|
Post by blaze on Nov 19, 2016 6:09:37 GMT 5
Then it was just me haha, good, there's lot of interesting papers there.
|
|
|
Post by Infinity Blade on Dec 4, 2016 6:49:04 GMT 5
blaze, would you mind if asked you for the whole of Tensile properties and fracture of ivory (Rajaram, 1986)?
|
|
|
Post by Infinity Blade on Feb 15, 2017 5:39:43 GMT 5
Another request, can anyone get me access to Analogies in the evolution of combat and display structures in ornithopods and ungulates?
|
|
|
Post by Infinity Blade on Apr 17, 2017 4:31:58 GMT 5
Yet another one. The locomotion of the camel (Camelus dromedarius) (Anne Innis Dagg).
|
|
|
Post by Infinity Blade on May 18, 2017 18:17:54 GMT 5
And a fourth: The fossil record of the sixth extinction (Plotnick et al. 2016).
|
|
|
Post by Infinity Blade on May 13, 2019 21:40:12 GMT 5
I love how much I've been able to solve with sci-hub.
But, does anyone know of any studies about how flexible the spinal column of non-avian theropod dinosaurs were? I know of one that suggested that metaplastic ligaments would have limited dorsoventral flexibility in large theropods (an adaptation to reduce downward sagging and increase locomotor efficiency), but what about lateral flexibility?
|
|
|
Post by theropod on May 14, 2019 0:55:51 GMT 5
Well, the neck has been studied quite a bit, but I think that’s not what you mean since we’ve discussed the studies in question before. The tails, at least in tetanurans, are pretty stiff, except near the base, but presumably to varying degrees. If its the trunk you mean, I think one could figure out how far it could flex until the ribs obstruct any further movement. I don’t know any studies on the latter.
|
|
|
Post by Infinity Blade on May 14, 2019 19:05:03 GMT 5
Well, the neck has been studied quite a bit, but I think that’s not what you mean since we’ve discussed the studies in question before. The tails, at least in tetanurans, are pretty stiff, except near the base, but presumably to varying degrees. If its the trunk you mean, I think one could figure out how far it could flex until the ribs obstruct any further movement. I don’t know any studies on the latter. Yeah, the trunk. So far, the closest thing I've found was a study with Plateosaurus. www.app.pan.pl/archive/published/app55/app20090075.pdf
|
|
|
Post by dinosauria101 on May 14, 2019 20:31:40 GMT 5
Well, the neck has been studied quite a bit, but I think that’s not what you mean since we’ve discussed the studies in question before. The tails, at least in tetanurans, are pretty stiff, except near the base, but presumably to varying degrees. If its the trunk you mean, I think one could figure out how far it could flex until the ribs obstruct any further movement. I don’t know any studies on the latter. Yeah, the trunk. So far, the closest thing I've found was a study with Plateosaurus. www.app.pan.pl/archive/published/app55/app20090075.pdfI'm sorry, WHAT? Unless I read something wrong, you're saying some dinosaurs may have had trunks?
|
|
|
Post by Infinity Blade on May 14, 2019 22:01:40 GMT 5
|
|
|
Post by dinosauria101 on May 15, 2019 1:15:11 GMT 5
Oh, okay. That makes MUCH more sense
|
|
|
Post by theropod on May 20, 2019 1:41:59 GMT 5
Does anyone know a good overview paper on Morrison Formation stratigraphy?
|
|
|
Post by dinosauria101 on May 20, 2019 2:38:12 GMT 5
|
|