You can support the Dinosaur Toy Forum by making dino-purchases through these links to Ebay and Amazon. Disclaimer: these and other links to Ebay.com and Amazon.com on the Dinosaur Toy Forum are often affiliate links, so when you make purchases through them we may make a commission.

avatar_Simon

How Long-Necked Dinosaurs Pumped Blood To Their Brains

Started by Simon, October 22, 2015, 08:13:35 AM

Previous topic - Next topic

Simon

Absolutely fascinating look at the unique physiology of these successful giants!!

"How Long-Necked Dinosaurs Pumped Blood to Their Brains

Well-preserved fossils include spring-like neck bones that may have helped the giants get blood from their hearts to their heads



Did Diplodocus walk with a spring in its neck? (Mark Garlick/Science Photo Library/Corbis)


By  Brian Switek 

smithsonian.com
October 21, 2015 10:57AM


Living large isn't easy. The sauropod dinosaurs—the biggest creatures to ever walk the Earth—required rapid growth rates, skeletons that were both light and strong and copious amounts of food, just for starters.

Now, paleontologists may have cracked one of the remaining mysteries about these giant dinosaurs: How did they pump enough blood up their long necks to feed their brains?

University of Southern California paleontologist Michael Habib was inspired to investigate sauropod necks after seeing bones from a giant titanosaur found in the New Mexico desert. The well-preserved neck bones included spines called cervical ribs that stretch almost six feet long. These rods, Habib says, turned out to be made of a very flexible sort of bone that "made pretty darn good springs."

As the giant dinosaurs walked, the motion would have created an "inertial problem" for the sauropods. Without something to dampen this effect, Habib says, "the neck is going to start to sway back and forth like a badly mounted crane or tree in a breeze."

This is where the cervical ribs came in. These springy bones dampened that effect, allowing the dinosaurs to keep their necks relatively steady as they plodded along, Habib told researchers gathered last week at the Society of Vertebrate Paleontology meeting in Dallas, Texas..."

*SNIP!!!"

THE REST OF THE STORY CAN BE READ HERE:

http://www.smithsonianmag.com/science-nature/how-long-necked-dinosaurs-pumped-blood-their-brains-180957011/?no-ist