May 17, 2011
The Diplodocus Tripod

A skeletal reconstruction depicting the old, tail-dragging image of Diplodocus. Image from Wikipedia.
One century ago, when paleontologists were still just becoming acquainted with the great dinosaurs of the American West, the skilled paleo-illustrator Charles R. Knight created a curious vision of the long-necked dinosaur Diplodocus. The consensus at the time was that the giant dinosaurs were amphibious—spending much of their time wallowing in swamps and straining soft water plants through their peg-like teeth—but in a scene that also contained this typical image, Knight presented one Diplodocus rearing back onto its tail. This seemed like a very active pose for the sauropod, one that would not become popular until decades later when dinosaurs got a major overhaul in the 1970s and 80s. What compelled Knight to give the Diplodocus a more dynamic position?
The answer can be found in an 1899 paper on Diplodocus by the American Museum of Natural History’s Henry Fairfield Osborn. In studying the dinosaur, Osborn was especially struck by the length of the animal’s tail. Clearly the tapering tail of Diplodocus must have been “of immense service as a propeller in enabling it to swim rapidly through the water,” and the naturalist even speculated that the dinosaur may have been equipped with a “vertical fin” near the tail tip to help move it along. But that wasn’t all. On land, the tail would have served a different purpose:
The tail, secondly, functioned as a lever to balance the weight of the dorsals, anterior limbs, neck and head, and to raise the entire forward portion of the body upwards. This power was certainly exerted while the animal was in the water, and possibly also while upon land. Thus the quadrupedal Dinosaurs occasionally assumed the position characteristic of the bipedal Dinosaurs—namely, a tripodal position, the body supported upon the hind feet and the tail.
Osborn based this supposition on what he thought was a change in tailbone anatomy about halfway down the organ’s length. To him, the posterior half of the tail looked well-suited to supporting the weight of Diplodocus when it reared up on its hind legs. That Diplodocus was capable of such activities was made clear by the relatively lightness of its skeleton compared to the more hefty “Brontosaurus.” “There is a traditional view that these animals were ponderous and sluggish,” Osborn wrote. “ In the case of Diplodocus [this view] is certainly unsupported by facts.” If the dinosaur had a relatively light skeleton and looked as if it should have been agile, then why shouldn’t it have been? This sentiment was clearly passed along to Knight, who created many dinosaur paintings for the AMNH and other museums, though Osborn’s idea that some sauropods were graceful was lost in the slew of museum displays and illustrations that showed them as big, slow reptiles. Sauropods remained relegated to the swamp, though it is too bad that Knight never illustrated Osborn’s idea that Diplodocus propelled itself about the Jurassic lakes with a tail fin!
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I think this creature has become one of the most important archeological links in the evolution of the dinosaurs into them current reptilian species. the weather and climate were completely different millions of years ago and the competion with other species and with the climate was not as great so this creature was free to evolve into the incredible life form that leaves its descendants and the rest of humanity in total awe of its power
No, Aldo, dinos didn’t evolve into modern reptiles. Quite the contrary, true lizards, snakes, crocodilians and turtles were all contemporaries of dinosaurs.
It is quite interesting though that Osborn was so far ahead of his time in believing brachiosaurus could tripod up on its hind legs and tail. But itwas common knowledge even back then, that some species of living monitor lizards do exactly the same thing.
Ironically most people nowadays, even dinosaur buffs are so familiar with the “horizontal stance” of theropod dinosaurs, that they are quick to call any depiction of these dinosaurs in the old “upright stance” to be unauthentic. But this is silly, for theropods probably “tripoded” quite a bit, in order to get a better view of the countryside, just as some monitor lizards do today.