It's from the Royal Ontario Museum in Toronto. Wikipedia on Crurotarsans (spelling?) says nothing of it.
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in The Biology Files
Crocodilian relatives that walked upright?
I seriously have trouble believing this. Can anybody shed some light?
It's from the Royal Ontario Museum in Toronto. Wikipedia on Crurotarsans (spelling?) says nothing of it.
It's from the Royal Ontario Museum in Toronto. Wikipedia on Crurotarsans (spelling?) says nothing of it.
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It's legit. The rauisuchians had a posture called "pillar-erect", achieved by making the ilium horizontal and moving the acetabulum ventrally, resulting in hind limbs that were vertical.
ReplyDeleteEven for crocodylomorphs, some suggest that an erect posture is the plesiomorphic condition, with the sprawling posture of crocs nowadays coming about as they adaptated to an aquatic lifestyle from the Jurassic onwards. This is supported by several basal fossils having an erect posture, such as Terrestrisuchus and Junggarsuchus. See Parrish (1987) for the details (Junggarsuchus was described in 2004, so isn't mentioned).
Fascinating. Thanks for sharing.
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