^^
Photos? lol It's from a yahoo news article bloke
^^
Photos? lol It's from a yahoo news article bloke
expert palaenologists have concluded its definitely another foot. when examined its very different from the rear feet. also palaentologists actually have the feet of the skeleton.
i dont no why youre saying theyre not walking in line. animals rarely walk in a completely straight line like a model. also it couldve been walking on tough terrain.
from what i remember the picture wasnt given a scale. how far do you think the footprints shold be from eachother.
palaentologists can quite easily tell the difference between a fractured foot and a totally different oot from a later species.
girraffes have long necks but walk on four feet. actually if it had a long neck and and a big beak it would walk better on four feet because theres more surface area making the pterosaur more stable. and pterosaurs were as big as giraffes so being stable was a high priority.
also it didnt spend much of its time on land so it doesnt need to stretch his neck all th time to see his surroundings.
also why do you think it had hands on its wings.
it did indeed have membranes. u cant be sure if it had scales or fur.
ive already shown how pterosaurs arent related to birds. theyre vastly different animals with very different skeletal structures. pterosaurs dont even have a wish bone. a pterosaur is as similiar to a bird as a dolphin is to a fish.
theres other dinosaurs that are far far more similiar.
its not walking on its elbows. your getting confused because its got a thumb as long as its limb. that hand is at the end of its limb with a very large thumb in the air.
palaentologists say some species could run. they said this after examing its rear limbs and front limbs and concluded that the size of them in relation to eachother meant that they could run.
Last edited by cj wisty; 10-27-2012 at 05:43 AM.
NON-IGS
http://www.accessscience.com/IOW/iow.aspx?iowID=42 heres an interesting article i found on pterosaurs
A modern-day man and giraffe, to scale, and the pterosaur, Hatzegotpteryx, which leapfrogged into the air. [Credit: Mark Witton]
It is hard enough to imagine a 500-pound, furry reptile the size of a giraffe soaring overhead. How the largest pterosaurs actually launched their prehistoric bulk into the air in the first place has proved to be a much trickier problem for biomechanics researchers. Now a study published January 6 in the journal Zitteliana seems to have settled the question. John's Hopkins University of Medicine researcher Michael B. Habib showed that pterosaurs didn’t flap their wings to take off from two legs as birds do, but stood on all fours and hurled themselves skyward in a leapfrog-style jump.
Paleontologists don't lose too much sleep over the question of how such giant creatures could remain airborne. Soaring, which would have been the most efficient flight strategy for a pterosaur-size animal, takes little energy. And once cradled in an updraft, large objects such as condors and hang gliders can remain aloft for long periods, given a large enough wingspan and relatively light weight. Having lightweight bones relative to their size is a characteristic these dinosaur-contemporaries shared with the dinosaurs' descendants, living birds. But other features of the two groups skeletons couldn't be more different.
Habib calculated the limb bone strengths of twenty bird species using computer scans and compared them to the bone strengths of three pterosaur species, calculated in previously published studies. He found that the flying reptiles would never have been able to leap into the air from two legs as birds do—their hindlimbs were too weak. The front limbs, or wings, however were structurally much stronger. His data suggested that not only did pterosaurs walk on all fours, but they employed a limb-over-limb vault to take flight.
This helps answer the question of why birds have never approached the towering heights of the larger pterosaurs. Birds' bipedal gait and liftoff requires leg bones and muscles strong enough to support the body's full weight and to supply 80 to 90 percent of the force required to jump into the air. A body built this way can get only so large before the weight of the legs becomes too heavy for flight. (Think of ostriches or the extinct, flightless elephant bird that had legs like tree trunks.) Pterosaurs allocated much of this weight-bearing function to the front limbs. Serving as flight equipment as well, the weight of muscles and bones contribute thrust and soaring ability in the air instead of merely adding weight. Examining the mathematical possibilities, Habib could find no way pterosaurs could have taken flight from just two legs. The limitation didn't slow them down though. He estimates that using the leapfrog takeoff strategy, pterosaurs such as the huge Hatzegotpteryx could jump into the air in one second, without the benefit of wind, cliffs, or any other pterosaur to leap over. “Pterosaurs had long, huge front limbs, so no partner was required," he says. "Then, with wings snapping out, off they’d fly.”
—Jessa Forte Netting
NON-IGS
i'll remind you that you haven't posted photographic evidence either.
you're more inclined to believe that this ^^^ that has four legs, no wings and a long tail is more likely to have had feathers and walked on 2 legs than
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this ^^ that has a beak, two bigs wings and two legs.
not if the foot had mutated
giraffes have long necks and most of the time they keep the necks upright, they only stoop their neck down when they need to. if you had a long neck like that you wouldn't want to walk with your neck out horizontally cos it would be a heavy strain on your neck, add a big heavy beak to that you ain't getting very far. swans, geese, flamingos, herons, storks all have long necks, long beaks, large wings and two feet. they all hold the necks upright and stand on its two feet when they are on land and they manage to keep stable just fine. they keep their necks upright not only because it is less strain on their necks but also to keep an eye out for predators. it would only hold its neck out horizontally to either catch something or in flight to make it more streamlined. going by the rib cage on pterosaurs i'm guessing body on pterosaurs would be similar to that of those birds i've mentioned, quite meaty and fatty and round. their wings are needed for flying, in order to fly it's body heat has to be a certain temperature, when they're on the ground they would have wrapped their wings around their bodies to not only rest their wings, they need to save their energy and wings for flying, but also to keep their bodies warm, just like all birds. bees need to get their bodies up to a certain temperature before they can fly, too.
so what if it didn't have a wish bone and so what if it had and extra bone on its wing?
a dolphin would be closer to a salmon than it is to a dog.
a pterosaur would be closer to a bird than it would a reptile.
that gif of the pterosaur walking is only supposed to show how a pterosaur walked. it wasnt trying to show its neck position.
i think it did probably have its neck rised like a giraffe.
the body of a pterosaur is very different from the body of a bird.
the fact the pterosaur didnt have a wish bone shows that its very unlikely that a bird evolved from it.
its far more likely that a bird evolved from an animal with a wishbone.
a dolphin is far more closer to a dog than a salmon.
dogs and dolphins are both mammals. a salmon is a fish. thats a totally different class.
NON-IGS
what do u mean by mutated foot.
also which two of these skeletons are the most similiar
NON-IGS
also i dont know why ur so eager to say birds came from pterosaurs. i thought this thread was about how dinosaurs never died out.
pterosaurs arent dinosaurs
NON-IGS
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