About site: Biology/Biomechanics - Fossil Biomechanics
Return to Science also Science
  About site: http://members.tripod.com/~gknight/

Title: Biology/Biomechanics - Fossil Biomechanics Current research into the biomechanics of fossil sea scorpions (eurypterids).
Human_Biomechanics_Course Lecture and laboratory notes, assignments, interactive simulations, and related links. St. Francis Xavier University, Canada.

Human_Lab_Sports Distributors of CD based sport biomechanics programs, designed to improve the performance of golfers, runners and cyclists.

International_College_of_Biomechanics Provides practical training in assessment procedures and treatments. Contains list of courses. New South Wales, Australia.

Motion_Analysis_Research_and_Rehabilitation_Center Offers services and research to sports, physiotherapy, legal and industrial clients. University College Worcester, U.K.

Orthopaedic_Biomechanics Detailed information on biomechanics of the muskuloskeletal system relevant to everyday orthopaedic practice. Includes short paper review, bibliography, news and related links.

AWC_Electronics Resources for basic stamp programming and accessories, tutorials, projects, with a basic stamp FAQ.


  Alexa statistic for http://members.tripod.com/~gknight/





Get your Google PageRank






Please visit: http://members.tripod.com/~gknight/


  Related sites for http://members.tripod.com/~gknight/
    BASIC_Stamp PIC16/17 Microcontroller
    Basic_Stamp_2 Tutorial and Applications. Sadly only for the BASIC stamp 2.
    Basic_Stamp_Microcontroller_Projects Basic Stamp, Pic microcontroller projects, BASIC stamp books
    Eric\'s_PIC_Page Nice reference page.
    HVW_Technologies_Inc_ A distributor of BASIC Stamp, development tools and software. They also have a download section about PICs.
    Instructions_for_Microcontroller_Beginner_Kit Tutorial for those who know nothing about electronics and want to learn from the beginning.
    LOSA Text files describing Stamp applications (List Of Stamp Application)
    OOPIC How to use the OOPIC microcontroller. OOPic is an acronym for Object-Oriented Programmable Integrated Circuit.
    Parallax,_Inc_ Basic stamp supplier.
    Peter_Anderson_-_Embedded_Processor_Control Embedded processor control using a PC parallel port, Parallax Basic Stamp BS2 and BS2SX and Microchip PICs. Inexpensive books, starter packages, data loggers, temperature measurement, weather measurem
    PIC16C5x_Disassembler DIS16 - PIC16C5x microcontroller family disassembler.
    The_PICList A collection of people interested in the Microchip PIC processor.
    Table_of_Contents_for_Basic_Stamp Table of Contents for the book Basic Stamp by Kuhnel and Zahnert
    Warburton_Technology BASIC Stamp computers, PIC microcontrollers, PicBasic compilers, PIC programmers, motion control systems, modules, components, development tools, embedded technology design and development service.
    Canadian_Nuclear_FAQ Unofficial and privately-maintained list of Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs) regarding CANDU reactors and nuclear power generation in Canada. Includes technical and waste management information, cost
    FEPC__Japan\'s_Nuclear_Power_Program Detailed review of the nuclear energy industry in Japan by the Federation of Electric Power Companies of Japan (FEPC). Describes fuel cycle, energy strategy and future plans for the sector.
    Frequently_Asked_Questions_About_Nuclear_Energy Discussion and FAQ from the Formal Reasoning Group (FRG) about nuclear energy sustainability.
    German_Atomic_Forum Private non-profit association of companies, institutions and private individuals supporting the peaceful utilisation of nuclear power. Includes news, publications and information on Germany's nuclear
    IAEA__Fast_Reactor_and_Accelerator_Driven_Systems_Knowledge_Base Project on technology advances in fast reactors and accelerator driven systems for actinide and long-lived fission product transmutation. Includes technical documents, working materials, technical dat
    IAEA__High_Temperature_Gas_Cooled_Reactors_(HTGR) Abstracts and full text of relevant technical documents on gas-cooled nuclear reactor technology. Includes safety aspects and technology applications.
    IAEA__International_Nuclear_Information_System_(INIS) International co-operative information system serving the peaceful applications of nuclear energy. Includes database, services and product information.
    IAEA__International_Nuclear_Information_System_(INIS) Information system on the peaceful use of nuclear science and technology. Provides a bibliographic database with abstracts and a collection of full texts.
    Nuclear_Energy Comprehensive information resource and links on nuclear energy, fuel fabrication, reactor theory and implications.
    Nuclear_Energy_Student_Programs_at_Argonne_National_Laboratory Information and internship opportunities in nuclear energy research and development. Includes useful links, downloadable documents, multimedia.
    Nuclear_Energy_Tomorrow_(NET) Focuses on understanding nuclear energy, interactive learning about nuclear energy. Includes nuclear technical information, history, applications and activities.
    Nuclear_Engineering_International Independent provider of news and articles for the nuclear power industry. Includes newsletter service, international event program, publications and contact information.
    Nuclear_Engineers_Forum Technical support forum and mutual help system for nuclear engineering professionals.
    Nuclear_Reactor_Simulation Simplified interactive simulation of a nuclear reactor for personal computer. Includes technical terms and data.
    Nuclear_Times Articles, news, and reports about innovative nuclear reactors.
    Nuclear_Ru Provides information about the nuclear industry in Russia. Covers aspects such as history, structure, prospects and future developments.
    One_Nuclear_Place_(1NP) Comprehensive guide to nuclear energy. Includes news from the Associated Press (AP) and general information on nuclear issues.
    Todd\'s_Atomic_Homepage Collection of articles and links on nuclear engineering, nuclear power, radioactive waste management and related topics.
    Uranium_Information_Centre_(UIC) Assist public understanding of uranium mining and nuclear electricity generation. Includes information on mining and nuclear electricity generation, mining and export in Australia.
    U_S__NRC__Students\'_Corner Nuclear energy tutorial from the Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC). Includes nuclear background, reactor design, radiation, emergency planning, decommissioning and related issues.
    The_Virtual_Nuclear_Tourist Information about the nuclear industry around the world. Provides a huge photo resource and good introduction for all age levels to learn about all aspects of nuclear technology.
    World_Nuclear_Association Blog, news, links on nuclear engineering topics and current events.
    Albemarle_Environmental_Exchange A site for promoting environmental protection and sustainable development. Contains news, ideas, articles, resources and links.
    Best_Practices_in_Sustainable_Development Searchable database cataloging over 650 good and best practices from more than 90 countries on how people, their communities, the public and private sectors have been able to tackle critical social, e
    Center_for_Ecoliteracy Works with schools and networks on education for sustainable living.
    Center_for_Watershed_and_Community_Health The Center assists communities, business and government to enhance the economy and environment by developing strategies to decouple economic growth, job creation and community development from enviro
This is sites2007.com cache of m/ as retrieved on 2008.12.02 sites2007.com's cache is the snapshot that we took of the page as we crawled the web. The page may have changed since that time.
Fossil biomechanics All swimming all dancing <b>fossil</b> page

The story of one man's plight to make fossils swim

Ugly mugWelcome to my homepage, which is really just a description of my Ph.D. project on fossil biomechanics.For the last three and a half years I have been working at the University of Manchester trying to work out how a strange group of extinct creatures called eurypterids would have swam. The problem is not at all straightforward. Since eurypterids are known only as fossils I have had to reconstruct their biomechanics with no behavioural data and often unreliable physical data. Indeed, the problem covers aspects of palaeontology, biology and engineering. I am now just finishing off writing up my Ph.D. thesis and this page presents the edited highlights (!) of that.Contact: gknight@fs1.ge.man.ac.ukThe problem One of the babiesEurypterids were chelicerates which thrived during the Ordovican to Devonian and went extinct at the end of the Palaeozoic. Eurypterids came in variety of shapes and sizes and some reached two metres in length. The species I am going to be talking about, a close relative of Eurypterus (right), was a more modest 20 cm or so as an adult.Some eurypterids possess paddles which many workers have regarded as an adaptation for swimming (others have suggested that they were used in digging). This assertion is supported by the remarkable similarities between the eurypterid paddle and the swimming paddle of living portunid crabs. The similarities are not just morphological: the two paddles show further similarities in their hydrodynamic characteristics and the positions and sizes of the muscle attachment sites.There have been two suggestions as to how eurypterids might have used their paddles to swim. The first, by Paul Selden, had the paddles used as oars. In this hypothesis the paddle blade is swept backwards relative to the body and oriented perpendicular to its own movement to maximise drag. The blade is turned ninety degrees during recovery to minimise drag, which here would be disadvantageous. Essentially, this is a rowing technique, similar to that used by water beetles and muskrats.The second suggestion, by Roy Plotnick from the University of Chicago, had the paddles used in a more sophisticated figure-of-eight mechanism, with the thrust being generated mainly through lift. Plotnick's model is comparable to the hovering phase of insect flight.Neither model was tested experimentally. Both look feasible on paper, but both are essentially speculations with no quantitative evidence to back them up.My wonderful inventionI have attempted to approach this problem from a biomechanical perspective. However, whereas most biomechanical studies have attempted to explain observed behaviour in mechanical terms, the aim of this study is to predict the likely behaviour of an animal from only morphological information.It has been necessary to develop a mathematical model for swimming in which the majority of the parameters can be obtained from fossil evidence. The models which currently exist were primarily developed for living animals and are therefore inappropriate. Very few of the variables which are used in my model cannot be obtained from fossil evidence; in some cases, however, such as body density, it is necessary to make comparisons with living animals, usually portunid crabs, of a similar size.Flume tankThe problem can be broken down thus. Swimming is achieved when the thrust forces produced by the paddle exceed the resistance forces of the body, essentialy the resultant of body weight and drag. We want to know how can the paddle produce sufficient thrust to overcome the forces resisting swimming in such a way that the power required to do so is minimised.It is necessary to know the hydrodynamic forces the paddle and body would have generated and to obtain such data from fossils, physical models must be built. The models are tested in a water flume tank at a range of speeds to measure the drag and the lift on them (left). Once such data has been obtained, it is a simple task to calculate the body resistance from standard equations. Calculating the thrust is a little more complicated. There are two reasons for this. First, the stroke angle is variable. The stroke angle is the range in which the paddle can be swept relative to the body. Its range can be estimated from the detailed reconstruction of the joint mechanics of Baltoeurypterus provided by Paul Selden in 1981. Second, the animal can vary the angle of attack of the paddle blade to optimise the ratio between the drag and lift production. In fact there are nine ways in which the animal can do this.Screen shotThus for each animal there are many thousands of equations to solve from which one stroke angle and stroke technique combination emerges as the most efficient. A computer program has therefore been developed to perform the calculations (right) and it takes about half an hour to arrive at an answer.The computer program, which is called "SimSwim" (I thought would cash-in on the popularity of SimCity and SimEarth, but it didn't quite work out), was tested with data from a portunid crab in order to see if its predictions are accurate. Since the paddles of portunid crabs are analogous to those of eurypterids and since their swimming behaviour is well documented, they would seem the obvious candidate for this test.In fact, the computer model provides a reasonably accurate reflection of the swimming mechanics of the swimming crab. Furthermore, it suggests that crabs swim most efficiently with a lift-based technique with steep power and recovery angles, which is in general agreement with observations made of crabs swimming. The swimming speeds and acceleration potentials it predicts are also in accordance with observed behaviour. SimSwim therefore holds up rather well.IconIf you're biomechanically minded, feel free to try out SimSwim (Mac-only). Download it from here.So how did the fossil animal swim?SwimmingI used the computer model to work out how an animal called Baltoeurypterus tetragonopthalmus, which was about 22 cm long, would have swam. Baltoeurypterus makes a good candidate for study because it was the subject of both Selden's and Plotnick's earlier hypotheses. The results show that both Selden and Plotnick got it wrong! Well they didn't get it wrong, but their theories do not represent the most efficient technique for swimming in Baltoeurypterus. The animal would have swum using an entirely lift-based stroke, with the paddle being swept forwards and down on the fore-stroke and backwards and up on the backstroke at an angle of about 45 degrees to the horizontal (right). Interestingly, the stroke mechanism suggested is identical to that observed in sea lions.The maximum swimming speed of Baltoeurypterus can be estimated if the maximum possible paddle speed is known. Obviously it is impossible to know the maximum forces that the eurypterid was capable of generating with its paddle, but comparisons with portunid crabs suggests an upper limit of around 1 m/sec. This translates into a maximum swimming velocity of between 3 and 4 m/sec which hardly makes Baltoeurypterus a fast swimmer, but it does compare well with turtles and sea otters. The acceleration potential of Baltoeurypterus can also be estimated, again by making comparisons with living animals. The large error bars here account for the fact that the aerobic efficiency of the muscles of Baltoeurypterus is not known. The acceleration potential of Baltoeurypterus is at best comparable with that of crabs and does not reach the impressive escape responses of fish.From its swimming technique it appears that Baltoeurypterus was a generalist, probably swimming not to hunt but to seek out new sites at which to feed on substrate dwellers like worms and smaller arthropods. This fits in with previous workers' suggestions regarding the ecology of the animal.Finally, I examined paddles from four growth stages of Baltoeurypterus and found that the paddles from smaller animals have much higher drag coefficients than the paddles from larger animals. In other words, smaller eurypterids could produce higher drag forces than larger eurypterids. This effect is partly caused by paddle growth, which increases at a rate slower than the increase in body length.One effect of this change in paddle drag is that smaller animals swim relatively faster than adults. Their actual speeds are, of course, lower, but juveniles were definately more sprightly than the older generation. Some workers foresaw this scenario and attributed it to the avoidance of predation and canibalism at a vulnerable stage in the young eurypterid's life. Another effect of the trend in the drag coefficient is that in smaller animals lift-based swimming mechanisms are less efficient than drag-based mechanisms. The lift:drag ratio of the paddle increases dramatically during the life of the animal. In fact, at body lengths of below 1 cm it is most likely that Baltoeurypterus used a drag-based technique, changing to the adult technique at higher swimming speeds and greater body lengths like the switch from walking to running in humans.Hairy paddleThe stroke technique employed by juvenile eurypterids is similar to that suggested by Selden, in that it is essentially a rowing mechanism, but here the stroke angle is tilted so that the paddle moves backwards and down. This is to overcome the submerged weight of the animal: Baltoeurypterus is negatively buoyant, unlike water beetles, and so must generate some upward thrust to compensate for that. The idea that juvenile eurypterids swam by drag-based techniques is supported by the observation of small hairs on the lateral margins of the paddles of small eurypterids (left). Such hairs flag the use of drag-based techniques, increasing surface area on the power stroke and feathering on the recovery stroke.The future...?I don't know how likely it is that this work will continue. The people with research grants just don't seem interested in knowing how fossil animals swam (for some reason). However, I think that with a little development a computer model such as mine could provide palaeontologists with a fairly reliable tool to reconstruct the functional morphology of long-extinct animals and allow them to, as it were, swim again.Links to related sites:IconCheck out Jason Dunlop's research into the origin of spiders.IconLyall's fossil surgery is open for business.IconThe homepage of my supervisor, Dr. Paul Selden. Includes more fossil/wildlife related Macintosh software.IconReconstruction of archosaurian forelimb musculature by Mason B. Meers at John Hopkins University, Baltimore.Made with a MacLast updated: 25 March 1997
 

Current

research

into

the

biomechanics

of

fossil

sea

scorpions

(eurypterids).

http://members.tripod.com/~gknight/

Fossil Biomechanics 2008 December

dvd rental

dvd


Current research into the biomechanics of fossil sea scorpions (eurypterids).

Rules




© 2005 Internet Explorer 5+ or Netscape 6+

Recommended Sites: 1. Arts - Business - Computers - Games - Health - Home - Kids and Teens - News - Recreation - Reference - Regional - Science - Shopping - Society - Sports - World Miss Gallery - Top Anime Hentai - DVD rental by mail - Mortgage Calculator - Myspace Layouts - Post Office Credit Card - Secured Loans - Credit Score
2008-12-02 09:56:31

Copyright 2005, 2006 by Webmaster
Websites is cool :)