- Title: Usain Bolt vs. T-rex: No contest says new research
- Date: 18th July 2017
- Summary: BERLIN, GERMANY (FILE) (REUTERS) ****WARNING CONTAINS FLASH PHOTOGRAPHY*** WIDE OF T-REX SKELETON ON DISPLAY VARIOUS OF T-REX SKELETON LONDON, ENGLAND, UNITED KINGDOM (FILE - MARCH 18, 2009) (REUTERS) VARIOUS OF LARGE ANIMATRONIC TYRANNOSAURUS REX MOVING AROUND
- Embargoed: 1st August 2017 11:49
- Keywords: Usain Bolt Tyrannosaurus rex dinosaurs University of Manchester running PeerJ
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- Country: United Kingdom
- Topics: Economic Events
- Reuters ID: LVA0046Q8V9ZV
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- Story Text: Usain Bolt, the fastest ever human, could comfortably outrun a Tyrannosaurus rex, according to scientists from the University of Manchester. In fact, so could many amateur athletes, with new research suggesting T-rex was physically incapable of running because of its size and weight, and would have broken its legs had it tried to break into a sprint.
The Cretaceous-era carnivore is considered one of the most fearsome creatures to ever walk the earth. But it turns out 'walking' is all it could muster, according to Professor William Sellers from the School of Earth and Environmental Sciences.
"The muscles need to be able to generate sufficient power to allow high speed locomotion, but at the same time the skeleton has to be able to cope with the loads generated by the high speed - and this is where it fails. T-rex's skeleton is simply not strong enough for running locomotion," Sellers told Reuters.
Researchers used an engineering technique called multibody dynamic analysis, coupled with machine learning, to produce what they say is the most accurate simulation of T-rex's gait and biomechanics to date.
The new research concludes that T-rex was limited to walking speeds of about 5 metres per second (m/s), equating to 12 mph (18 kmh) -- less than half the speed of Usain Bolt's personal best of 27.8 mph (44 kmh).
The running ability of T-rex has been hotly debated among palaeontologists for decades. But the consensus based on previous biomechanical models was that the dinosaur could manage speeds anywhere up to 45 mph (75 kmh). A study published in the Royal Society's Biological Sciences in 2007 suggested a more conservative top-speed of 18 mph (29 kmh), but this would have still been fast enough for T-rex to chase down many modern-day runners, especially over long distance.
Sellers said previous methods for analysing locomotion of fossil animals may have been 'over-simplified'.
"Animals are a mechanical system with many different components working together to produce the desired outcome. You need to consider all the important mechanical processes when assessing athletic ability," he said.
Sellers believes the study forces a re-think on how this supposedly ferocious carnivore caught its prey.
"It certainly would not have been able to chase down faster moving prey animals," said Sellers. "That leaves other hunting options such as ambush, and of course it means that ideas such as 'T-rex the scavenger' have to be reconsidered."
The research, published in the scientific journal PeerJ, states running at high speeds was probably highly unlikely for other large two-legged dinosaurs such as, Giganotosaurus, Mapusaurus, and Acrocanthosaurus. - Copyright Holder: FILE REUTERS (CAN SELL)
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