Accurately1 depicting2 dinosaur3 anatomy4(解剖学) has come a long way since the science fiction films of the 1960s. In celebration of the American Association of Anatomists' (AAA) 125th anniversary,
renowned5 dinosaur anatomy expert Dr. Lawrence Witmer will deliver a lecture reflecting on the AAA's first President Joseph Leidy, also a
preeminent6(卓越的) American dinosaur paleontologist, and the
modernizing7 of
prehistoric8 bones. Witmer will show how the Visible
Interactive9 Dinosaur (VID) project recreates soft-tissue systems within a 3D digital environment. VID, funded by the National Science Foundation, is a global project that aims to digitally put back all of the tissues that time has stripped away to create the most realistic
renderings10 of
dinosaurs11 science has seen.
"Nature has left us bones," said Witmer. "We need to flesh them out, put back muscles, nerves,
sinuses(鼻窦), and
animate12 the skeleton. VID does that. We look at animals today, starting with dinosaur descendants -- birds and crocodiles -- and we study them to have an understanding of how the dinosaur
jaw13 worked, and what their brain structure was," he added.
"Hollywood has been bringing dinosaurs to life for years, but as scientists we can do it in a controlled way to see how these anatomical systems actually work," said Witmer. "Dinosaurs present interesting problems; the solutions help explain scientific issues in
physiology14(生理学) and anatomy, such as how does a 50-ton animal move around? How did they pump blood to a head 30 ft away?" The answers inform today's anatomy questions.
Dr. Witmer sees the work of VID as having a
dual15 purpose --
helping16 other paleontologists and educating, even inspiring, the public about physiology and anatomy.
"The study of dinosaurs is important because it allows us to reach people about science. The fact is, dinosaurs are popular but science is still considered 'hard' by many people. So one of the missions of VID is to use dinosaurs as a tool to excite people about anatomy and science. We
lure17 them with dinosaurs and
sneak18 in cool science," he said. The result is a win for both scientific
advancement19 and science
advocacy(主张,拥护).