Scientists Show Dinosaur Body Shape Changed The Way Birds Stand

Credit: University of Liverpool Scientists at the University of Liverpool and the Royal Veterinary College developed computer models of the skeletons of dinosaurs to show how body shape changed during dinosaur evolution and affected the way birds stand today. The study reveals for the first time that, contrary to popular opinion, it was the enlargement of the forelimbs over time, rather than the shortening and lightening of the tail, that led to two-legged dinosaurs gradually adopting an unusually crouched posture, with the thigh held nearly horizontally – a trait inherited by their descendants: birds. The research group used digitising technology to create 3D images of the skeletons of 17 archosaurs – land animals including living crocodiles and birds as well as extinct dinosaurs. They then digitally added ‘flesh’ around the skeletons to estimate the overall shape of the body as well as the individual body segments such as the head, forelimbs and tail. Evolution: Dr Karl Bates, from the University’s Institute of Ageing and Chronic Disease, said: “The evolution of birds from their dinosaurian ancestors is historically important not only to dinosaur research but also to the development of the theory of evolution itself. “Way back in the 1860’s, Thomas Huxley used Mesozoic dinosaurs and modern birds as key evidence in...
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Climate change caused human evolution?

© Flickr.com/Truthout.org/cc-by-nc-sa 3.0 Human evolution was triggered by climate change, not work, US scientists said in their recent research.They claim man had to adapt to survive the period of climate changes for over 200,000 years. Now Russian experts will study the theory. American researchers write “the landscape early humans were inhabiting transitioned rapidly back and forth during a period of 200,000 years. These changes happened very abruptly”. This rapid change could have triggered development of the brain, social skills and tool use. Social anthropologist Alexander Kazankov finds the theory a mainstream trend of today’s anthropology. "That’s exactly how homo sapiens sapiens evolved. And that’s a fact. Abrupt climate changes trigger evolutionary mechanisms to deal with those changes." Alexei believes that the environment changes drove the evolution of the genus Homo and made people scatter across Africa, which some call the cradle of humanity, and further to other continents. However, not all scientists share the hypothesis. Paleoanthropologist Alexander Belov believes climate changes to be important but not decisive. The recent findings contradict previous theories which suggest evolutionary changes were gradual. The expert adds that it’s hard to speak about any gradual evolutionary succession or reconstruct...
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