Summary. Palaeontologists recognise that they have a tough challenge when faced with determining how dinosaurs went about their day to day activities, for example how fast they could run and whether bipedal examples walked with the upright gait typical of museum displays. Apart from the occasional pile of petrified bones, the only other clues available are track-ways or fossilised footprints. Even these are contentious, with disagreement as to whether track morphology can be used to identify different species. As well as the morphology of the footprint itself, in the three-dimensional zone beneath, sedimentary deformations provide a snapshot of how the ancient sediment responded to loading. The nature of these plastic deformations depends o...
Existing knowledge of the tracks left by sauropod dinosaurs (loosely ‘brontosaurs’) is essentially t...
This paper reports the use of FEA (Finite Element Analysis) to model dinosaur tracks. Satisfactory r...
This University of Bristol page discusses the process and importance of studying dinosaur tracks and...
AbstractWhilst bones present a static view of extinct animals, fossil footprints are a direct record...
Locomotion over deformable substrates is a common occurrence in nature. Footprints represent sedimen...
Several lines of evidence are presented in this text that can help us estimate how dinosaurs could m...
The use of 3-D Structure from Motion models to study fossils is a relatively new technique that has ...
The use of 3-D Structure from Motion models to study fossils is a relatively new technique that has ...
This dissertation develops and employs objective and quantitative methods for the analysis of dinosa...
The dinosaur track record features numerous examples of trackways with elongated metatarsal marks. S...
A dinosaur trackway in the Middle Jurassic eolian Entrada Sandstone of southern Utah, U.S.A., expose...
A new investigation of the sedimentology and ichnology of the Early Jurassic Moyeni tracksite in Les...
The dinosaur track record features numerous examples of trackways with elongate metatarsal marks. Su...
Theropod dinosaurs are considered the main terrestrial carnivores in the Jurassic and Cretaceous. Th...
The fossil footprints have been used to back calculate the properties of the soil in the Age of Din...
Existing knowledge of the tracks left by sauropod dinosaurs (loosely ‘brontosaurs’) is essentially t...
This paper reports the use of FEA (Finite Element Analysis) to model dinosaur tracks. Satisfactory r...
This University of Bristol page discusses the process and importance of studying dinosaur tracks and...
AbstractWhilst bones present a static view of extinct animals, fossil footprints are a direct record...
Locomotion over deformable substrates is a common occurrence in nature. Footprints represent sedimen...
Several lines of evidence are presented in this text that can help us estimate how dinosaurs could m...
The use of 3-D Structure from Motion models to study fossils is a relatively new technique that has ...
The use of 3-D Structure from Motion models to study fossils is a relatively new technique that has ...
This dissertation develops and employs objective and quantitative methods for the analysis of dinosa...
The dinosaur track record features numerous examples of trackways with elongated metatarsal marks. S...
A dinosaur trackway in the Middle Jurassic eolian Entrada Sandstone of southern Utah, U.S.A., expose...
A new investigation of the sedimentology and ichnology of the Early Jurassic Moyeni tracksite in Les...
The dinosaur track record features numerous examples of trackways with elongate metatarsal marks. Su...
Theropod dinosaurs are considered the main terrestrial carnivores in the Jurassic and Cretaceous. Th...
The fossil footprints have been used to back calculate the properties of the soil in the Age of Din...
Existing knowledge of the tracks left by sauropod dinosaurs (loosely ‘brontosaurs’) is essentially t...
This paper reports the use of FEA (Finite Element Analysis) to model dinosaur tracks. Satisfactory r...
This University of Bristol page discusses the process and importance of studying dinosaur tracks and...