CHAPTER 4 Flashcards

1
Q

sprawling stance

A

an animals humerus and femur project horizontally, with elbows and knees strongly bend.

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2
Q

Erect stance

A

an animals humerus and femur project vertically, such that the limbs point straight down from their girdles

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3
Q

advantage and disadvantage to an erect stance

A

Advantage:
- positions the limb bones directly under the body, this allows to passively support the body weight

-Better for fast locomotion and allows all limbs to contribute to the length of a stride

disadvantage:
- requires muscle to do not my work then a sprawling stance would do.

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4
Q

what do all tetrapods share a common ancestor with

A

a common ancestor with a sprawling stance.

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5
Q

were dinosaur erect or sprawling

A

erect

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6
Q

advantages and disadvantages for sprawling stance

A

advantages:
- less energy is spent to support body weight

Disadvantage: unable to move fast and

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7
Q

Cursorial limbs

A

are limbs specially adapted for fast locomotion. tend to have very long lower legs bones

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8
Q

digitigrade posture

A

stand on their own toes

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9
Q

plantigrade posture

A

stand simultaneously on our toes and the flat part, and our heels

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10
Q

graviportal limbs

A
  • specially adapted for supporting extremes body weight.
  • have bones that are robust and heavy. limbs tend to be short and bend as little as possible when walking
  • tend to have large fleshy pads to provide solid support base and help absorb impacts
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11
Q

obligate bipeds

A

animals that almost always walk and run on two legs.

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12
Q

obligate quadrupeds

A

animals that almost always walk and run on four legs.

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13
Q

facultative bipeds

A

walk on all four legs, but rise on two legs to run.

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14
Q

what was the walking stance of the ancestor for all dinosaurs

A

obligate biped

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15
Q

caudofemoralis

A
  • a large muscle that pulls backwards on the hid leg,

- is anchored to the under surface of the ilium, to the caudal vertebrae, it attaches via tendon and femur

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16
Q

trochanter

A

a prominence of bone,

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17
Q

what does a larger caudofemoralis indicate ?

A

that the dinosaur was most likely a fast runner and was adapted for greater hindlimb power.

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18
Q

where is the caudofemoralis located on most theropods

A

located high on the femur

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19
Q

Ichnofossils

A

fossils that record traces of biological activity, like fossil footprints and tooth mark and burrows.

20
Q

how does a footprint fossilize ?

A

1) must be made in soft mud
2) mud must dry out and Harden
3) must be buried and then eventually re-exposed for the palaeontologist to find

21
Q

trackways

A

an entire series of footprints found.

22
Q

what were hadrosaurs and iguanodons?

A

facultative bipeds

23
Q

were dinosaurs cold or warm blooded

A

warm blooded

24
Q

which is ectotherm

A

cold-blooded

25
Q

which is endotherm

A

warm-blooded

26
Q

Ectotherms

A

animals that adjust their internal body temperatures through behaviours that depends on temperature differences within their environments

27
Q

Endotherms

A

animals that regulate their body temp through metabolic activity

28
Q

disadvantage of endotherms

A

In order to maintain a constant body temp, a lot of energy is spent to do this.

29
Q

are most organism ectotherms or endotherms

A

ectotherms

30
Q

advantages to endotherms

A
  • can survive in the cold.
  • always ready for actions, cold or warm, day or night.
  • instead of spending time sunbathing like ectotherms, they spend that time eating and gaining energy.
31
Q

do endotherms or ectotherms benefit from feathers and shit

A

endotherms because it helps them hold o to body heat.

32
Q

Histology

A

a technique of slicing samples of bones into very thin sections

33
Q

osteons

A

bone cells

34
Q

which group grow their bones quicker then the other

A

endotherms from bones faster then ectotherms. they also have their osteons in a different arrangement.

35
Q

giganthermic

A

instead of being endotherms, large dinosaurs ectothermic, but with their low ratio of surface area to volume, it would have prevented them fro losing significant energy to the outside world. they could live endothermic-like lives without actually needing to produce body heat by burning energy.

36
Q

cube square law

A

the larger the animal is, then they have relatively less surface area to volume ratio.

37
Q

Dinosaurs that are obligate quadrupeds

A
  • sauropods
  • ankylosaurs
  • stegosaurs
38
Q

what were prosauropods walking stance

A

probably bipedal, but whether they were obligate or facilitative is unknown.

39
Q

where does the caudofemoralis attach to

A

it attaches to the trochanter.

40
Q

how do we know dinosaur have caudofemoralis

A

Dinosaurs have a femurs with trochanters (prominence of bone)

41
Q

how can you determine whether a dinosaurs had a large cuadofemoralis

A

based on the size of the various anchor points.

42
Q

where is the caudofemoralis located on carnivores?

A

higher on the femur. this increase the speed.

43
Q

where is the caudofemoralis located on hadrosaurs

A

lower on the femur. this slowed down the speed but better endurance.

44
Q

who benefits from having higher endurance

A

herbivores recuasse hey are always on the move.

45
Q

what can trackways determine?

A

can determine how fast dinosaurs moved.

46
Q

how can trackways be used to determine a dinosaurs speed.

A

estimate dinosaur leg lengths from the proportions of their footprints. full speed cannot be determine because they had to run through mud.