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Re: [dinosaur] Tyrannosaurus rex walking speed (free pdf)



The article focuses on the effects of vertical tail movement. Videos of alligators  walking up on high legs show what seems to be no tail movement, and  certainly none vertically.  So, what is the evidence for the tail movement of T. Rex?
Thanks 
Michael 

Sent from my iPhone

On Apr 21, 2021, at 17:15, Mike Taylor <sauropoda@gmail.com> wrote:

ï
1.28 m/s is a bit less than 3 mph, which is a reasonable human walking speed. Is it credible to imagine a T. rex walking alongside a human at the same speed? I'm not sure it is. It would require either very short strides or a very slow stride time. Perhaps this finding fails the "smell test". Or perhaps I am just using an Argument From Personal Incredulity.

-- Mike.


On Wed, 21 Apr 2021 at 18:39, Ben Creisler <bcreisler@gmail.com> wrote:

Ben Creisler

A new paper with free pdf:


Free pdf:

Pasha A. van Bijlert, A. J. âKnoekâ van Soest and Anne S. Schulp (2021)
Natural Frequency Method: estimating the preferred walking speed of Tyrannosaurus rex based on tail natural frequency.
Royal Society Open Science 8(4): 201441
doi: https://doi.org/10.1098/rsos.201441
https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/10.1098/rsos.201441



Locomotor energetics are an important determinant of an animal's ecological niche. It is commonly assumed that animals minimize locomotor energy expenditure by selecting gait kinematics tuned to the natural frequencies of relevant body parts. We demonstrate that this allows estimation of the preferred step frequency and walking speed of Tyrannosaurus rex, using an approach we introduce as the Natural Frequency Method. Although the tail of bipedal dinosaurs was actively involved in walking, it was suspended passively by the caudal interspinous ligaments. These allowed for elastic energy storage, thereby reducing the metabolic cost of transport. In order for elastic energy storage to be high, step and natural frequencies would have to be matched. Using a 3D morphological reconstruction and a spring-suspended biomechanical model, we determined the tail natural frequency of T. rex (0.66 sâ1, range 0.41â0.84), and the corresponding walking speed (1.28 m sâ1, range 0.80â1.64), which we argue to be a good indicator of preferred walking speed (PWS). The walking speeds found here are lower than earlier estimations for large theropods, but agree quite closely with PWS of a diverse group of extant animals. The results are most sensitive to uncertainties regarding ligament moment arms, vertebral kinematics and ligament composition. However, our model formulation and method for estimation of walking speed are unaffected by assumptions regarding muscularity, and therefore offer an independent line of evidence within the field of dinosaur locomotion.

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