To finish up... When we put Nigersaurus in its "alert posture," indeed it's head points straight down. We're not saying that this is their habitual posture, but most animals spend a lot of their lives being alert and so I'm guessing Nigersaurus mostly fed in this posture, too. Keep in mind that, although the teeth are facing the ground, the eyes are perched higher and oriented for scanning the surroundings.
This is Witmer replying to you now. The reality is that most animals can and do move their heads all over the place for various behaviors. However, research on modern-day animals shows that when animals are alert and all their senses are heightened, they tend to orient their heads such that their inner ears have a particular orientation (the lateral semicircular canals are horizontal).
Comment removed
tyrantslayer24 2 years ago
To finish up... When we put Nigersaurus in its "alert posture," indeed it's head points straight down. We're not saying that this is their habitual posture, but most animals spend a lot of their lives being alert and so I'm guessing Nigersaurus mostly fed in this posture, too. Keep in mind that, although the teeth are facing the ground, the eyes are perched higher and oriented for scanning the surroundings.
witmerlab 2 years ago
This is Witmer replying to you now. The reality is that most animals can and do move their heads all over the place for various behaviors. However, research on modern-day animals shows that when animals are alert and all their senses are heightened, they tend to orient their heads such that their inner ears have a particular orientation (the lateral semicircular canals are horizontal).
witmerlab 2 years ago
for whoever posts these vids in lieu of Dr.Witmer:
did nigersaurus's head face directly downwards towards the ground?
Albukhshi 2 years ago