Thanks to Tim M. Ryan, research associate in anthropology, and to the industrial-size CT scanner at Penn State's Center for Quantitative Imaging, the bone structure of a previously unknown, 220 million-year-old long-necked, gliding reptile is seen.
Credit: Tim Ryan June 12, 2007
Thanks to Tim M Ryan, research associate in anthropology, and to the industrial-size CT scanner at Penn State's Center for Quantitative Imaging, the bone structure of a previously unknown, 220 million-year-old long-necked, gliding reptile is seen. Close up CT scan, composite image of fossil gliding reptile Mecistrotrachelos apeoros. Curved foot and ribs are clearly visible
Credit: Tim Ryan June 12, 2007