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Re: diminutive dinosaurs
Mickey Mortimer (Mickey_Mortimer111@msn.com) wrote:
<The known specimens are smaller than Parvicursor (130 mm, ~6 g vs. ~390
mm, ~160 g), but are not mature based on the large head and eyes, unfused
neurocentral sutures, unfused sacrum, and perhaps poorly formed remiges.>
While large head and eyes seem to occur typically among rather small
birds and mammals today, relative to their trunk length say, or large eyes
indicative of a possible nocturnal habit despite apparent fusion of some
braincase elements in *Scansoriopteryx,* there are also what appear to be
poorly-defined margins between bones that indicate incomplete limb growth.
These animals may be younger than subadults, and could be only about 1/3
or less adult size (but that's pushing predictive ability fairly far).
=====
Jaime A. Headden
Little steps are often the hardest to take. We are too used to making leaps
in the face of adversity, that a simple skip is so hard to do. We should all
learn to walk soft, walk small, see the world around us rather than zoom by it.
"Innocent, unbiased observation is a myth." --- P.B. Medawar (1969)
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