Its been a busy few days. Last week I flew to Houston (Texas), to give a keynote lecture at the SPAR meeting....here is where dinosaurs and lasers collide!
SPAR is a meeting that runs in the USA, Europe and Japan, that explores the development and application of lasers... predominantly to surveying. Long gone are the days of chain or plane-table surveys and in with the lasers.
Whilst many use lasers to scan refineries or sediment package geometry of hydrocarbon reservoirs...my group have a passion for laser scanning dinosaurs....of the skeletal variety. Combined with the liberal application of various software packages, we are now able to scan, 'volumize' (nothing to do with hair) and measure how fat our dinosaurs once were....or how thin, depending on the wrapping formulae we use to skin our dinosaurs.
Why should we worry about the body mass of dinosaurs? Well, this is one of those parameters that can make you an Olympic 100 Metre sprinter...or a 6-pack couch potato (in this case the 6-pack has nothing to do with abdominal musculature and more to do with brewers yeast). Body-mass really matters, as this strongly correlates with locomotor ability and all manner of key functions that define the ecology and behavior of beasties long past....such as the skeleton of Brachiosaurus (above) captured using a Z+F LiDAR scanner when we were working in Berlin the other year.
So, the next time you spot a 'surveyor' in a museum....capturing a mounted skeleton in all its glorious 3 dimensions....just pinch them and check that they are not a paleontologist digitally kidnapping and weighing a dinosaur!
Browse these pages to learn more about the University of Manchester Applied Palaeontology Research Group. This blog is written and regularly updated by palaeontologist Dr Phil Manning.
Monday, 23 April 2012
Monday, 9 April 2012
Secretive fossils.....
Fossils can be a secretive bunch…. possessing
hidden stories encoded in the very chemistry of which they are composed. Some
of the brightest x-ray light sources (synchrotrons) in the world allow the
imaging, analysis, and reconstruction of chemical traces from prehistoric life.
My team and I are no strangers to the fields of particle physics,
biology and paleontology, where our interests often collide...shedding
intense x-ray light on some very ancient remains. From the writings of Archimedes
to prehistoric traces of soft tissues, we have explored fossilized chemical
ghosts...occasionally breathing new life into old bones. Fossils that have
included the iconic remains of Archaeopteryx to the beautifully
preserved Confuciusornis...our team has worked hard to unlock
these fossilized echoes of past life. These chemical ghosts will
undoubtedly yield benefits to our understanding of Earth processes, from the
past and present, but also the future....hence
why paleontology should be given its chance at the funding table.
| Aerial shot of the Stanford Synchrotron (SPEAR denotes booster and storage ring). |
It is a strange twist of fate that the synchrotrons which
were primarily built for particle physicists to smash particles together in
order to help identify the fundamental building blocks of matter...are now
applied to matters most ancient. The crucial by-product of accelerating
particles in these cyclic accelerators are the intense x-rays that were
initially not utilized by the atom-smashing physicists. However,
synchrotrons such as the Stanford Synchrotron Radiation Lightsource (SSRL, USA)
and Diamond (UK) are now primarily built around x-ray experiments. The
Manchester team is working in collaboration with both SSRL and Diamond
on analyzing both the fossil remains and living tissues of beasties
that occupy our planet today. To understand the past, a pinch of
extant flesh is often required (albeit often from
museum collections and road-kill!).
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| Schematic of Diamond Synchrotron Light Source (Oxford, UK). |
Synchrotron Rapid Scanning X-ray Fluorescence has been used
for many years in quantitative elemental analysis of a whole range of samples.
Synchrotron-based XRF imaging combines the elemental sensitivity of X-rays with
the high spatial resolution and intensity of synchrotron radiation. Recently
the technique has been successfully applied at SSRL to study large objects
including human brain slices, Archimedes Palimpsest and rare fossils preserving
soft tissue. The unique chemistry of each object is the key to our
research….and the subject of future blogs.
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| C. sanctus....after a synchrotron imaging reveals its hidden plumage patternation! |
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