Footprints in Spain show meat-eating dinosaurs were fast and furious
It roughly matches the top speed achieved by Jamaican sprinter Usain Bolt, the world's fastest human being.
By REUTERS, Published:
DECEMBER 9, 2021
Dinosaurs (photo credit: Wikimedia Commons)
It almost is not fair. Carnivorous dinosaurs were armed with
menacing teeth inside muscular jaws, wielded dangerous claws on their
hands and feet, and boasted keen vision and sense of smell. And, as new
research confirms, some were pretty fast, too.
Two
trackways of Cretaceous Period fossilized footprints from about 120
million years ago discovered in northern Spain's La Rioja region show
that the medium-sized meat-eating dinosaur species that made them could
run at about 28 miles per hour (45 kph), scientists said on Thursday.
This roughly matches the top speed achieved by Jamaican sprinter Usain Bolt, the world's fastest human being.
Two trackways located about 65 feet (20 meters) apart were discovered, one with seven footprints and the other with five.
Each
track - an impression of a three-toed foot with claws - measures around
12 inches (30 cm) long. They were made on the muddy surface of a lake
plain in a region also populated by long-necked plant-eating dinosaurs,
bipedal plant-eating dinosaurs, flying reptiles called pterosaurs,
crocodiles, and turtles.
fossil of a dinosaur claw. (credit: DEAN MOUHTAROPOULOS/GETTY IMAGES)
Speed only added to the arsenal of meat-eating dinosaurs like the species that left the footprints in Spain.
"Their
capacity to run very quickly and their maneuvering abilities surely
allowed them to chase prey very efficiently. And of course I wouldn't
like to be caught by this guy on a riverbank," said Pablo
Navarro-Lorbes, a paleontology doctoral student at Universidad de La
Rioja in Spain and lead author of the research published in the journal
Scientific Reports.
The
footprints bore characteristics showing they were made by a theropod, a
group encompassing all the meat-eating dinosaurs, including Tyrannosaurus rex. Theropods were bipedal, with the largest perhaps 50 feet (15 meters) long.
The researchers believe the trackways were made by two different
individuals of the same species. They suspect it was from one of two
theropod families: the spinosaurs, many of which were fish-eaters, or
carcharodontosaurs, known for shark-like teeth. The individuals were
about 13-16 feet (4-5 meters) long and 7 feet (2 meters) tall, weighing
440-660 pounds (200-300 kg).
Running
speed was calculated based on the relationship between the animal's hip
height - estimated from the footprint length - and stride length. The
stride length from one of the trackways was 18.3 feet (5.6 meters),
while the other was 17.2 feet (5.2 meters).
One
of the dinosaurs ran 19.7-27.7 miles per hour (31.7-44.6 kph) - among
the highest speed ever estimated for a dinosaur - and the other at
14.5-23.1 miles per hour (23.4-37.1 kph). One trackway indicates a
smooth increase in speed. The other suggests an animal maneuvering as it
ran.
Universidad
de La Rioja paleontologist and study co-author Angelica Torices said
speed helped not only in hunting but in fleeing danger including "bigger
theropods that could see them as their prey."
Of the innumerable dinosaur
tracks found worldwide, nearly all represent walking rather than
running. The fastest estimated running speed based on footprints was a
Jurassic Period theropod trackway in Utah at 34 miles per hour (55 km
per hour).
Scientists
also have calculated dinosaur speeds based on biomechanical models. The
fastest using this method was the Jurassic turkey-sized theropod
Compsognathus at 40 miles per hour (65 km per hour).
"There are several factors that dictate the running ability of a dinosaur," Navarro-Lorbes said.
"One
of them is size. Some paleontologists think that theropods with sizes
between 100 and 1,000 kilograms (220-2,200 pounds) could have been some
of the best dinosaur runners because of the relationship between their
weight and muscular performance," Navarro-Lorbes added, with elongated
legs another key factor.
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