South Australian Museum: Icthyosaur modelling project
Dr Ben Kear, SA Museum and School of Environmental and Earth Sciences, University of Adelaide
The South Australian Museum enjoys a globally significant collection of palaeontology specimens including unique and well-preserved fossil remains of ichthyosaurs, marine reptiles from the Mesozoic period.
In collaboration with Dr Ben Kear, a vertebrate palaeontologist from the SA Museum and the University of Adelaide, and Ben Hill, a student from the University of South Australia, eResearch SA provided advanced computing and visualisation support for a project to reconstruct the head of one such ichthyosaur.
With Dr Kear's advice, Ben Hill created a three-part computer model of the skull of an ichthyosaur. The model is as anatomically accurate as possible, including the size and position of the muscles controlling the jaw, the position of the eye and possible location and shape of the "nose".
The base of the model is a scan of a well-preserved ichthyosaur skull; on this were built several major muscles (from scars left on the skull) and then the external surface of the ichthyosaur.
The skull was scanned at the Queen Elizabeth Hospital. The DICOM images were then converted to .stl format (using Osirix) and imported into Rhino for the reconstruction and eventual animation using Quicktime Pro.
A number of marine fossils have been found in areas of Australia that are now well inland; studies of the geological history of Australia show that it once had a major inland sea.
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