- stebo02 ( @stebo02@sopuli.xyz ) English44•11 months ago
Actually this is how we’ve been reconstructing dinosaurs. They’re probably all very wrong.
- Malgas ( @Malgas@beehaw.org ) English44•11 months ago
- makuus ( @makuus@pawb.social ) English13•11 months ago
I want to believe…
- MonkderZweite ( @MonkderZweite@feddit.ch ) English4•11 months ago
Then you have physcs and how much weight the bones can lift before breaking.
- protist ( @protist@mander.xyz ) English14•11 months ago
T. rex may have had lips, for example
- dingleberry ( @dingleberry@discuss.tchncs.de ) English18•11 months ago
Luscious kissable lips?
- embed_me ( @embed_me@programming.dev ) English5•11 months ago
😗
- MonkderZweite ( @MonkderZweite@feddit.ch ) English2•11 months ago
It’s a while ago. Now they’re probably pretty accurate.
- usualsuspect191 ( @usualsuspect191@lemmy.ca ) English2•11 months ago
The book All Yesterdays explores this
- Salvo ( @Salvo@aussie.zone ) English1•11 months ago
Just purchased. Now it will languish in my iBooks library with other illustrated books until some time in the distant future…
- baseless_discourse ( @baseless_discourse@mander.xyz ) English37•11 months ago
I remember someone mentioned online that the reconstruction of animals are more complicated than just tracing the bone line.
I am very interested if some experts are willing to tell us more.
- blackbrook ( @blackbrook@mander.xyz ) English10•11 months ago
They can get some idea from the bones of muscle attachment points and how strong of a muscle would have been attached.