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DATE | 2013-05-01 |
FROM | Ruben Safir
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SUBJECT | Subject: [NYLXS - HANGOUT] Re: Definitions of running (was RE: RE: Complaining)
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I am forwarding you this detailed conversation on Biomechanics that is raging on the Dinosaur Mailing List. Please see my Commentary about half way down...
On Tue, Apr 30, 2013 at 09:46:08PM -0400, GSP1954-at-aol.com wrote: > "We do find evidence that elephants run in a sense," > > said first author John Hutchinson, a Stanford > > postdoctoral research fellow in the Department of > > Mechanical Engineering. "It's an intermediate > > sort of gait, but it looks like what we > > biomechanically would call running. They don't leave > > the ground, which is the classical definition, but > > they do seem to bounce, which is the biomechanical > > definition." > > The problem with saying that elephants can run is that elephants cannot > really run the way most mammals can. Saying animals can either just walk or can > run is to simplistic, there are as above notes transitional forms like > elephants that have barely some running attributes, but are much slower than > most mammals and cannot even trot like hippos much less gallop like rhinos (not > a simple size thing, an adult horse the same mass as a juvenile elephant is > almost three times faster, its the flexed limbs and perhaps mass dedicated > to locomotion that makes the difference). > > The way it should work is this. > > If an animal cannot achieve "a bounce" nor a suspended phase then it cannot > run and is only walking (fits salamanders I think, turtles, maybe the > biggest sauropods since even just walking their long strides could have gotten > them to the elephant max of 15 mph). > > If it can achieve a bounce in a least one set of limbs but cannot bounce > enough to get all feet off the ground at the same time then it is semirunning > or ambling (elephants, unitatheres, most sauropods, derived stegosaurs). > > If it can achieve enough bounce to get all feet off the ground then it is > achieving a full or true run (bipedal run, hopping, trot, pace, canter, > gallop)
You forgot skipping. Have you ever seen an elephant skip?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ERymFcS-fCg
> (most limbed reptiles, most all dinosaurs including giant theropods, > giant ornithopods, giant ceratopsid, big ankylosaurs [albeit barely], many > birds, most mammals including hippos [they can really haul all that fat around on > those dinky limbs, no point in trying to outrun one], brontotheres, > indricotheres). > > GSPaul >
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