Don't look for seeing-eye cheetahs anytime soon, but the big cats may help disabled people in another way—by inspiring better artificial legs.
© 2009 National Geographic (AP)
Unedited Transcript
Almost a standing start to a headlong sprint.
Zero to 65 five miles per hour in just a few paces is simple for this cheetah.
Shiraz is one of a group of cheetahs under close scrutiny from scientists at the Royal Veterinary College's Structure and Motion Laboratory.
These researchers are hoping that by discovering what makes the cheetah the fastest land mammal in the world they'll discover the key to more sophisticated ways of dealing with lameness in animals, designing safer horse and dog tracks, helping humans run faster and designing human prosthetics.
Force panels slotted flush into the ground of the cheetah's compound are able to carry out minute measurements.
Wednesday, October 28, 2009
Tuesday, October 20, 2009
Mighty T. Rex Killed by Pigeon Parasite?
After surviving countless battles, a giant T. rex was ultimately taken down by a microscopic parasite akin to one carried by modern pigeons, scientists say.
The finding is a new interpretation of multiple holes in the jawbone of "Sue," the largest and most complete Tyrannosaurus rex fossil yet found, which is on display at the Field Museum in Chicago.Initially researchers had said the holes are bite wounds made by other another T. rex. But most paleontologists now agree that the holes are too neat and smooth to have been caused by teeth scraping across bone.
In a new study, researchers instead propose that the holes are lesions made by an ancient version of trichomonosis, a single-celled parasite that infects the throats and beaks of modern birds.How the huge dinosaur died, however, has been unclear. Despite Sue's multiple injuries, the animal seems to have lived with most of them for years.In birds, trichomonosis causes inflammation in the beak and upper digestive tract, which makes feeding and even breathing very difficult.Birds' bodies react by sealing off infected tissue, but over time byproducts from this immune response can damage bone, creating lesions.
Sue had about ten such lesions on her jaw, some of them large enough for a human adult to poke a finger through.Based on the size and number of lesions, the team thinks Sue's disease was at an advanced stage and may have been so severe that the dinosaur starved to death.
http://news.nationalgeographic.com
The finding is a new interpretation of multiple holes in the jawbone of "Sue," the largest and most complete Tyrannosaurus rex fossil yet found, which is on display at the Field Museum in Chicago.Initially researchers had said the holes are bite wounds made by other another T. rex. But most paleontologists now agree that the holes are too neat and smooth to have been caused by teeth scraping across bone.
In a new study, researchers instead propose that the holes are lesions made by an ancient version of trichomonosis, a single-celled parasite that infects the throats and beaks of modern birds.How the huge dinosaur died, however, has been unclear. Despite Sue's multiple injuries, the animal seems to have lived with most of them for years.In birds, trichomonosis causes inflammation in the beak and upper digestive tract, which makes feeding and even breathing very difficult.Birds' bodies react by sealing off infected tissue, but over time byproducts from this immune response can damage bone, creating lesions.
Sue had about ten such lesions on her jaw, some of them large enough for a human adult to poke a finger through.Based on the size and number of lesions, the team thinks Sue's disease was at an advanced stage and may have been so severe that the dinosaur starved to death.
http://news.nationalgeographic.com
Thursday, October 8, 2009
Komodo Cousin "A Nasty Piece of Work
The "tantalizing bones"—which date to the middle of the Pleistocene epoch (1.8 million to 11,500 years ago)—are unique enough that Hocknull suspects they represent a new species. But only "more fossils and time will tell," said Hocknull, senior curator of geosciences at Australia's Queensland Museum.
The newfound predator would have lived in open landscapes alongside giant tortoises, dwarf elephants, and perhaps even the extinct human ancestral species Homo erectus, Hocknull said.
Like the Komodo, the lizard would have ambushed its prey
More on: http://news.nationalgeographic.com
The newfound predator would have lived in open landscapes alongside giant tortoises, dwarf elephants, and perhaps even the extinct human ancestral species Homo erectus, Hocknull said.
Like the Komodo, the lizard would have ambushed its prey
More on: http://news.nationalgeographic.com
Sunday, September 6, 2009
My Dog is everything for me
This morning I opened my inbox to find a press release from Dexter, a dog.
Actually, it wasn't from Dexter. It was from his PR company, letting me know about Dexter's new blog that will be done entirely in his first person doggie voice. It's called Dexter Speaks.
Just what the world needs -- another blogging, Tweeting, pen-in-hand animal. Seriously?
The adorable four-year-old Goldendoodle, Dexter, is writing the blog with "help" from his owner, a copywriter named Chuck Kent. Exactly how far is this literary conceit supposed to go? If Dexter gets a book deal out of this, which certainly has crossed the mind of Kent, I hope that Dexter spends the entire advance on gourmet bones and fresh tennis balls. It's only fair, right, since he did all the "writing."
Monday, August 31, 2009
crane have included flight lessons for the endangered snowbirds.
Recovery efforts of the whooping crane have included flight lessons for the endangered snowbirds. Ultralight aircraft and radio-controlled robots disguised as cranes have lead hand-reared birds south to winter in protected areas.
Top 10 Most Incredible Animal Journeys 2
Freshwater eels are born prepared for the rough waters they face in life. After hatching in the salty Sargasso Sea, the eels swim to freshwater rivers in the United Kingdom and the East Coast of North America. On the way, their kidneys adapt to the change in salinity. When it's time to lay eggs, the eels and their kidneys will return to their beginnings.
Top 10 Most Incredible Animal Journeys
Animals will make extraordinary and often mysterious expeditions to find a good meal, sexy mates, and the perfect place to raise a family. This month, billions of cicadas will burst out from their 17-year-old hiding places to complete one of the longer journeys in time, while moving only a few inches from burrow to daylight. Other migrations cover thousands of miles. -
Corey Binns
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