Showing Tag: "banjo" (Show all posts)

First CT Scans!

Posted by Brant Bassam on Thursday, April 28, 2011, In : Digital Dinosaurs 



Me, Matt White, Ian Pengelly and Sarah Woolridge
at the Queensland X-ray's CT scanner
with Banjo's humerus (upper arm bone)

We want to bring Australian dinosaurs back to life as properly as the science, technology, and contemporary thinking allows. The aim is to show what our long-lost animals really looked like in the flesh, then make them walk, run and interact as they once did on the big screen! Crucial to the restoration process is the capture of every last bit of evidence the fossils ...
Continue reading ...
 

Banjo's Digital Arm

Posted by Brant Bassam on Wednesday, June 30, 2010, In : Digital Dinosaurs 


To my my mind, the most exciting thing about Banjo, our specimen of Australovenator wintonensis, is his arm. He's a theropod predator of the T. rex body type but he's wonderfully different, especially in the arm and hand department.

T. rex is a huge animal with an equally huge head. It uses its head as the primary weapon; it just crunches into prey. The arms don't amount to much, in fact they're so small that their practical use is still not understood. Same goes for many other theropod di...
Continue reading ...
 

Recreating Banjo—a strategy

Posted by Brant Bassam on Saturday, June 12, 2010, In : Digital Dinosaurs 

In the previous digital dinosaur post I said the right way to rebuild a dinosaur is to capture every shred of scientific evidence. Seems obvious doesn’t it? But there are a lot of dinosaurs that we all know and love that contradict the evidence. Sauropods are a classic exampl...


Continue reading ...
 

Reunited

Posted by Trish Sloan on Tuesday, June 8, 2010, In : In The Laboratory 

Working in the lab gives people the opportunity to discover brand new Australian Dinosaur bones. Most would say the most wonderful experience is removing the matrix (clay) and seeing the bone being exposed for the first time in 100 million years. However some would say the most rewarding and exhilarating part is witnessing bones that have been apart for millions of years and seeing them be reunited like they've never been apart.


In the photo above is the right humerus and ulna from Banjo, t...
Continue reading ...
 

Humerus Story

Posted by Trish 'Tricky' Sloan on Wednesday, April 7, 2010, In : In The Laboratory 

I must relate an amazing discovery. It fascinates me no end how the earth can preserve something so delicate and precious for nearly a hundred million years, keeping it safe and secure until someone stumbles across it in a paddock. The bone I'm talking about is one belonging to the world's first specimen of Australoventor wintonensis aka 'Banjo'.




So my humerus story begins...

On the 5th of September 2009, Ali Calvey, a 'Dugger' (meaning someone who has been on dinosaur dig before with us)...


Continue reading ...
 

Digital Dinos—A New Project!

Posted by Brant Bassam on Thursday, April 1, 2010, In : Digital Dinosaurs 



At Australian Age of Dinosaurs we have the world's richest source of Aussie Dinosaur fossils. We love our fossil bones. Each one having taken hundreds and sometimes thousands of hours to prepare and all of them from species new to science. That's special stuff and they are beautiful and precious things to behold. But it can't end there!

Our dream is to bring these wonderful animals back to life. We want everyone to see the real animals our fossil bones belonged to. But how to do that?

Well, we ...

Continue reading ...
 
 
blog comments powered by Disqus
Make a Free Website with Yola.