Fuente: University of Cambridge News
  Expuesto el: jueves, 24 de mayo de 2012 9:04
  Autor: University of Cambridge News
  Asunto: 3D model reveals how ancient creature got around
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 An ancient four-limbed    creature that’s thought to be the first ever to walk on land couldn’t actually    walk at all, researchers have discovered. Instead, they think the    animal, which scientists call an early tetrapod, simply hauled itself out of    the primordial ooze with its two front limbs, using its back limbs merely for    balance. “These early tetrapods    probably moved in a similar way to living mudskipper fishes in which the    front fins, or arms, are used like crutches to haul the body up and forward,”    explains Dr Stephanie Pierce from The Royal Veterinary College and University    of Cambridge, lead author of the study, published in Nature today. Pierce and co-authors,    Professor Jennifer Clack from the University of Cambridge and Professor John    Hutchinson form The Royal Veterinary College, made their discovery by    creating the first ever 3D computer model of an early tetrapod’s skeleton.    Their aim was to work out how its limbs might have moved. They scanned dozens of    fossil specimens of a tetrapod that lived around 360 million years ago called    Ichthyostega.    They digitally separated the bones from the rock surrounding the fossils.    Then they put each bone back together into a whole skeleton, ‘ like a jigsaw    puzzle,’ using animation software, before carefully manipulating the model to    estimate each joint’s range of motion. To make sure their    computer model was reliable, they built similar models of seals, salamanders,    platypuses, crocodiles and otters and used the model to test their joint    movements. They found that the model predicted a reliable amount of mobility. Their model also revealed    that the creature wouldn’t have been able to move its hip and shoulder joints    very much at all. Not just that, but its limbs couldn’t rotate along their    long axis, a movement that’s essential for locomotion in today’s land    animals. This means it probably couldn’t push its body off the ground and    move each of its limbs in turn. “All this points to the    idea that limbs may have evolved before the ability to actually walk. It also    shows that just because you have limbs, it doesn’t mean you can walk,” says    Pierce. “Our reconstruction    demonstrates that the old idea, often seen in popular books and museum    displays, of Ichthyostega    looking and walking like a large salamander, with four sturdy legs, is    incorrect,” says Clack. “Remarkably, earlier    fishes (called tetrapodomorphs) had the ability to rotate their fins, so it    seems that just as vertebrates were experimenting with terrestrial movement,    the limbs became confined to mainly back-and-forth and up-and-down motions.    It wasn’t until tetrapods became more competent on land that they recovered    the ability to rotate their limbs around their long axis,” says Hutchinson. The findings suggest that    some of the 400 million-year-old footprints discovered in Poland two years    ago – thought to have been made by similar tetrapods – may have been made by    altogether different four-legged animals. The study was funded by    the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC). Article courtesy of    NERC. This work is licensed    under a Creative    Commons Licence. If you use this content on your site please link back to    this page. Please enable JavaScript    to view the comments powered by    Disqus. 
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