News
Release from Ohio University:
CT scans reveal that dinosaurs were
airheads
Skull cavities helped creatures breathe,
communicate and move
ATHENS, Ohio (Dec. 8, 2008) —
Paleontologists have long known that dinosaurs had tiny
brains, but they had no idea the beasts were such
airheads.
A new study by Ohio University
researchers Lawrence Witmer and Ryan Ridgely found that
dinosaurs had more air cavities in their heads than
expected. By using CT scans, the scientists were able to
develop 3-D images of the dinosaur skulls that show a
clearer picture of the physiology of the airways.
“I’ve been looking at sinuses for a
long time, and indeed people would kid me about studying
nothing—looking at the empty spaces in the skull. But
what’s emerged is that these air spaces have certain
properties and functions,” said Witmer, Chang Professor
of Paleontology in Ohio University’s College of
Osteopathic Medicine.
Witmer and Ridgely examined skulls
from two predators, Tyrannosaurus rex and
Majungasaurus, and two ankylosaurian dinosaurs,
Panoplosaurus and Euoplocephalus, both plant
eaters with armored bodies and short snouts. For
comparison, the scientists also studied scans of
crocodiles and ostriches, which are modern day relatives
of dinosaurs, as well as humans.
The analysis of the predatory
dinosaurs revealed large olfactory areas, an arching
airway that went from the nostrils to the throat, and
many sinuses—the same cavities that give us sinus
headaches. Overall, the amount of air space was much
greater than the brain cavity.
The CT scans also allowed Witmer
and Ridgely to calculate the volume of the bone, air
space, muscle and other soft tissues to make an accurate
estimate of how much these heads weighed when the
animals were alive. A fully fleshed-out T. rex
head, for example, weighed more than 1,100 pounds.
“That’s more than the combined
weight of the whole starting lineup of the Cleveland
Cavaliers,” Witmer said.
Witmer suggests that the air spaces
helped lighten the load of the head, making it about 18
percent lighter than it would have been without all the
air. That savings in weight could have allowed the
predators to put on more bone-crushing muscle or even to
take larger prey.
These sinus cavities also may have
played a biomechanical role by making the bones hollow,
similar to the hollow beams used in construction — both
are incredibly strong but don’t weigh as much their
solid counterparts. A light but strong skull enabled
these predators to move their heads more quickly and
helped them hold their large heads up on cantilevered
necks, explained Witmer, who published the findings in a
recent issue of The Anatomical Record.
Though most researchers have
assumed that the nasal passages in armored dinosaurs
would mimic the simple airways of the predators, Witmer
and Ridgely found that these spaces actually were
convoluted and complex. The passages were twisted and
corkscrewed in the beasts’ snouts and didn’t funnel
directly to the lungs or air pockets.
“Not only do these guys have nasal
cavities like crazy straws, they also have highly
vascular snouts. The nasal passages run right next to
large blood vessels, and so there’s the potential for
heat transfer. As the animal breathes in, the air passed
over the moist surfaces and cooled the blood, and the
blood simultaneously warmed the inspired air,” said
Witmer, whose research is funded by the National Science
Foundation. “These are the same kinds of physiological
mechanisms we find all the time in warm-blooded animals
today.”
These twisty nasal passages also
acted as resonating chambers that affected how the
ankylosaurs vocalized. The complex airways would have
been somewhat different in each animal and might have
given the dinosaurs subtle differences in their voices.
“It’s possible that these armored
dinosaurs could recognize individuals based on the
voice,” said Witmer, who noted that his research team’s
studies of the inner ear revealed a hearing organ that
probably had the capability to discriminate these subtle
vocal nuances.
Though Witmer found few
similarities between the dinosaur and human sinuses —
our brain cavities take up much more space relative to
our sinuses — the scientist did find a resemblance
between the air spaces of the crocodiles and ostriches
and the ancient beasts under study.
“Extra air space turns out to be a
family characteristic,” he said, “but the sinuses may be
performing different roles in different species.
Scientists have tended to focus on things such as bones
and muscle, and ignored these air spaces. If we’re going
to decipher the mysteries of these extinct animals,
maybe we need to figure out just why it is that these
guys were such airheads.”
Contact:
• Lawrence Witmer, (740) 593-9489,
witmerL@ohio.edu;
• Director of Research Communications Andrea Gibson,
(740) 597-2166,
gibsona@ohio.edu
Note to Media:
High-resolution images and animations of the animals
under study, as well as the original journal article,
are available online:
DinoSinuses_main.htm.
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