A pair of scientists dove right in to figure out how a dinosaur-era lookalike
of the fabled Loch Ness paddled its fins.
The creature, a Plesiosaur, was a real-life, long-neck, fish-eating reptile
with powerful jaws. It died out along with the dinosaurs. Some speculate the
Loch Ness Monster is a descendent of the Plesiosaur, though mainstream scientists,
who doubt the very existence of Nessie, say the Plesiosaur is indeed extinct.
Either way, the Plesiosaur had four awkward-looking fins protruding from its
whale-sized body, and scientists have been unable to figure out how it used
them to maneuver through the water well enough to rule the seas in the dinosaur
era.
"There is a long controversy about how Plesiosaurs swam," said Kenneth
Carpenter, a paleontologist at the Denver Museum of Nature and Science who led
the research.
Human Plesiosaurs
So, armed with plastic recreations of the flippers of the marine reptile, the
husband and wife team of Brian and Julia Reed jumped into a pool and swam in
tandem.
One hypothesis was that the Plesiosaur used its flippers as oars on the surface
of the water. Another, called the sea lion model, proposed the fish hunter pulled
its fins up close to its body as it swam. The new research supported neither
idea. The Reeds found that the easiest way to get around was by paddling all
four fins at the same time.
"We concluded that it was by using all four arms at once -- like a bird
with four wings,".
In much the same way as birds bob up and down as they move forward in flight,
the Plesiosaur moved gently up and down as it flew through the water, the results
suggests. One key to how the fins moved comes from measurements of the reptiles
joints in fossils.
"The limitation of the socket of the Plesiosaur is nothing like that of
human, and is closest to that of a sea turtle," Carpenter said. "Next
time you have chicken wings take a look at the bone on the end of a drumstick.
The white cap is cartilage that keeps bone from rubbing on bone and it leaves
a mark that remains on fossils."
Even though soft tissue is rarely preserved, researchers can take the measurements
of how far in any direction the socket can move before it exceeds the mark of
the cartilage. This range-of-motion evidence directly contradicts the theory
that Plesiosaurs swam like sea lions, by bringing their flippers up against
their bodies. Plesiosaurs couldn't have made that motion, Carpenter and his
colleagues concluded.
Next step: Speed
The possible speed of the animal as it swam is an even more complicated matter
that Carpenter and his colleagues are just beginning to analyze. By reconstructing
the volume of muscle on the limbs they hope to figure out the amount of power
and force provided by each arm.
"Speed’s a tough one, but I think we can approximate force and get a rough
idea on speed, at least to within about 25 percent," Carpenter said.
It is unusual in modern science to use humans rather than a computer to model
a dead animal's movement. Carpenter maintains that doing and seeing is an important
part of gathering evidence.
"It’s a case of garbage in and garbage out. In a computer model you can
make anything possible -- you can manipulate anything," he said. "We
didn’t want to interject our bias or preconceived notions."
The preliminary results have been published in the Journal of Vertebrate
Paleontology. A full analysis is expected in 2006.