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Body Size
Ground Reaction Force
Muscle Mechanics
Safety Factor
Small Mammals
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Scaling Body Support in Mammals: Limb Posture and Muscle Mechanics
Scaling Body Support in Mammals: Limb Posture and Muscle Mechanics,10.1126/science.2740914,Science,Andrew A. Biewener
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Scaling Body Support in Mammals: Limb Posture and Muscle Mechanics
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Citations: 182
)
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Andrew A. Biewener
The scaling of bone and muscle geometry in mammals suggests that peak stresses (ratio of force to cross-sectional area) acting in these two support elements increase with increasing body size. Observations of stresses acting in the limb bones of different sized mammals during strenuous activity, however, indicate that peak bone stress is independent of size (maintaining a
safety factor
of between 2 and 4). It appears that similar peak bone stresses and muscle stresses in large and
small mammals
are achieved primarily by a size-dependent change in locomotor limb posture: small animals run with crouched postures, whereas larger species run more upright. By adopting an upright posture, large animals align their limbs more closely with the ground reaction force, substantially reducing the forces that their muscles must exert (proportional to body mass0.74) and hence, the forces that their bones must resist, to counteract joint moments. This change in limb posture to maintain locomotor stresses within safe limits, however, likely limits the maneuverability and accelerative capability of large animals.
Journal:
Science
, vol. 245, no. 4913, pp. 45-48, 1989
DOI:
10.1126/science.2740914
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Citation Context
(37)
...Mammals maintain similar stresses imposed by body mass on their skeletons via size-dependent changes in limb posture, such that larger mammals adopt a less flexed or more upright posture, aligning limbs with the ground reaction force (
Biewener 1989
)...
Aaron R. Wood
,
et al.
Postcranial Functional Morphology of Hyracotherium (Equidae, Perissoda...
...,
...
John R. Hutchinson
,
et al.
A Computational Analysis of Limb and Body Dimensions in Tyrannosaurus ...
...It may also minimise the axial load on single legs [
4
,31], i.e...
...both minimising the sum of the absolute values of all joint torques [1,
4
,5] and the sum of all bending loads [43] within that leg...
Michael Günther
,
et al.
The load distribution among three legs on the wall: model predictions ...
...In addition, the mechanical advantage (
Biewener 1989;
Full and Ahn 1995) in the examined joint (muscle lever/metatarsus length = 1/13) is relatively low...
Tobias Siebert
,
et al.
Cupiennius salei : biomechanical properties of the tibia–metatarsus jo...
...The relationship between body size and joint posture has been described previously in diverse mammalian samples (
Biewener 1989, 1990
) as well as in primates (Polk 2002 ;P olket al. 2009)...
John D. Polk
,
et al.
Subchondral Bone Apparent Density and Locomotor Behavior in Extant Pri...
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Citations
(182)
Postcranial Functional Morphology of Hyracotherium (Equidae, Perissodactyla) and Locomotion in the Earliest Horses
Aaron R. Wood
,
Ryan M. Bebej
,
Carly L. Manz
,
Dana L. Begun
,
Philip D. Gingerich
Journal:
Journal of Mammalian Evolution - J MAMM EVOL
, vol. 18, no. 1, pp. 1-32, 2011
A Computational Analysis of Limb and Body Dimensions in Tyrannosaurus rex with Implications for Locomotion, Ontogeny, and Growth
John R. Hutchinson
,
Karl T. Bates
,
Julia Molnar
,
Vivian Allen
,
Peter J. Makovicky
,
Leon Claessens
Journal:
PLOS One
, vol. 6, no. 10, 2011
Frame indifferent formulation of Maxwell’s elastic-fluid model and the rational continuum mechanics of the electromagnetic field
Christo I. Christov
Journal:
Mechanics Research Communications - MECH RES COMMUN
, vol. 38, no. 4, pp. 334-339, 2011
On the equilibrium configurations of an elastically constrained rotating disk: An analytical approach
Ramin M. H. Khorasany
,
Stanley G. Hutton
Journal:
Mechanics Research Communications - MECH RES COMMUN
, vol. 38, no. 4, pp. 288-293, 2011
The load distribution among three legs on the wall: model predictions for cockroaches
Michael Günther
,
Tom Weihmann
Journal:
Archive of Applied Mechanics - ARCH APPL MECH
, vol. 81, no. 9, pp. 1269-1287, 2011