Extant Crocodylia are exceptional because they employ almost the full range of quadrupedal footfall patterns (“gaits”) used by mammals; including asymmetrical gaits such as galloping and bounding. Perhaps this capacity evolved in stem Crocodylomorpha, during the Triassic when taxa were smaller, terrestrial, and long-legged. However, confusion about which Crocodylia use asymmetrical gaits and why persists, impeding reconstructions of locomotor evolution. Our experimental gait analysis of locomotor kinematics across 42 individuals from 15 species of Crocodylia obtained 184 data points for a wide velocity range (0.15–4.35 ms−1). Our results suggest either that asymmetrical gaits are ancestral for Crocodylia and lost in the alligator lineage, o...
Many of the major locomotor transitions during the evolution of Archosauria, the lineage including c...
We documented trackways of free-living Crocodylus acutus on beaches at the mouths of Tamarindo and V...
Bipedalism evolved more than twice among archosaurs, and it is a characteristic of basal dinosaurs a...
Although two major clades of crocodylians (Alligatoroidea and Crocodyloidea) were split during the C...
Crocodylia is a remarkably successful group of archosaurs (crocodylians, birds, and all descendants ...
The lineage leading to modern Crocodylia has undergone dramatic evolutionary changes in morphology, ...
Quantitative functional anatomy of amniote thoracic and abdominal regions is crucial to understandin...
How extinct, non-avian theropod dinosaurs locomoted is a subject of considerable interest, as is the...
Crocodilians have played a significant role in evolutionary studies of archosaurs. Given that severa...
Twenty-four species of crocodile populate the globe today, but this richness represents a minute fra...
A review of the type material of the crocodylomorph ichnotaxon Crocodylopodus meijidei Fuentes Vidar...
Although arboreality in extinct crocodilians is frequently suggested, the climbing abilities of exta...
Living archosaurs (birds and crocodylians) have disparate locomotor strategies that evolved since th...
A reversion to secondary quadrupedality is exceptionally rare in nature, yet the convergent re-evolu...
An attempt has been made to explain the features of the wrist structure of crocodiles, which sharpl...
Many of the major locomotor transitions during the evolution of Archosauria, the lineage including c...
We documented trackways of free-living Crocodylus acutus on beaches at the mouths of Tamarindo and V...
Bipedalism evolved more than twice among archosaurs, and it is a characteristic of basal dinosaurs a...
Although two major clades of crocodylians (Alligatoroidea and Crocodyloidea) were split during the C...
Crocodylia is a remarkably successful group of archosaurs (crocodylians, birds, and all descendants ...
The lineage leading to modern Crocodylia has undergone dramatic evolutionary changes in morphology, ...
Quantitative functional anatomy of amniote thoracic and abdominal regions is crucial to understandin...
How extinct, non-avian theropod dinosaurs locomoted is a subject of considerable interest, as is the...
Crocodilians have played a significant role in evolutionary studies of archosaurs. Given that severa...
Twenty-four species of crocodile populate the globe today, but this richness represents a minute fra...
A review of the type material of the crocodylomorph ichnotaxon Crocodylopodus meijidei Fuentes Vidar...
Although arboreality in extinct crocodilians is frequently suggested, the climbing abilities of exta...
Living archosaurs (birds and crocodylians) have disparate locomotor strategies that evolved since th...
A reversion to secondary quadrupedality is exceptionally rare in nature, yet the convergent re-evolu...
An attempt has been made to explain the features of the wrist structure of crocodiles, which sharpl...
Many of the major locomotor transitions during the evolution of Archosauria, the lineage including c...
We documented trackways of free-living Crocodylus acutus on beaches at the mouths of Tamarindo and V...
Bipedalism evolved more than twice among archosaurs, and it is a characteristic of basal dinosaurs a...