scholarly journals Patterns of aquatic decay and disarticulation in juvenile Indo-Pacific crocodiles (Crocodylus porosus), and implications for the taphonomic interpretation of fossil crocodyliform material

2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Caitlin Syme ◽  
Steven Salisbury

High levels of skeletal articulation and completeness in fossil crocodyliforms are commonly attributed to rapid burial, with decreasing articulation and completeness thought to result from prolonged decay of soft tissue and the loss of skeletal connectivity during ‘bloat and float’. These interpretations are based largely on patterns of decay in modern mammalian and avian dinosaur carcasses. To address this issue, we assessed the decay of buried and unburied juvenile Crocodylus porosuscarcasses in a controlled freshwater setting. The carcasses progressed through typical vertebrate decay stages (fresh, bloated, active decay, and advanced decay), reaching the final skeletal stage on average 56 days after death. Unburied carcasses commenced floating five days post-mortem during the bloated stage, and one buried carcass only commenced floating 12 days post-mortem. While floating, skeletal elements remained articulated within the still coherent dermis, except for thoracic ribs, ischia and pubic bones. The majority of disarticulation occurred at the sediment-–water interface after the carcasses sank during the advanced decay stage, ~ 36 days post-mortem. Based on these results we conclude that fossil crocodyliform specimens displaying high levels of articulation are not the result of prolonged subaerial and subaqueous decay in a low-energy, aqueous environment. Using extant juvenile C. porosus as a proxy for fossil crocodyliforms, rapid burial in an aquatic setting would have to occur prior to the carcass floating, and would also have to continually negate the positive buoyancy associated with bloating. Rapid burial does not have to be the only avenue to preservation of articulation, as other mechanisms such as physical barriers and internal physiological chemistry could prevent carcasses from floating and subsequently disarticulating upon sinking. The inference that a large proportion of skeletal elements could drift from floating carcasses in a low energy setting with minimal scavenging, thereby causing a loss of completeness, seems unlikely.

Author(s):  
F. Riva ◽  
U. Buck ◽  
K. Buße ◽  
R. Hermsen ◽  
E. J. A. T. Mattijssen ◽  
...  

AbstractThis study explores the magnitude of two sources of error that are introduced when extracorporeal bullet trajectories are based on post-mortem computed tomography (PMCT) and/or surface scanning of a body. The first source of error is caused by an altered gravitational pull on soft tissue, which is introduced when a body is scanned in another position than it had when hit. The second source of error is introduced when scanned images are translated into a virtual representation of the victim’s body. To study the combined magnitude of these errors, virtual shooting trajectories with known vertical angles through five “victims” (live test persons) were simulated. The positions of the simulated wounds on the bodies were marked, with the victims in upright positions. Next, the victims were scanned in supine position, using 3D surface scanning, similar to a body’s position when scanned during a PMCT. Seven experts, used to working with 3D data, were asked to determine the bullet trajectories based on the virtual representations of the bodies. The errors between the known and determined trajectories were analysed and discussed. The results of this study give a feel for the magnitude of the introduced errors and can be used to reconstruct actual shooting incidents using PMCT data.


LASER THERAPY ◽  
1991 ◽  
Vol 3 (2) ◽  
pp. 83-85 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lloyd S. McKibbin ◽  
Robert Downie

1996 ◽  
Vol 32 (2) ◽  
pp. 97-101 ◽  
Author(s):  
NA Sanders ◽  
RL Kerlin ◽  
DM Dambach

A six-month-old Neopolitan mastiff presented for a rapidly growing cervical mass. Undifferentiated sarcoma was diagnosed at post mortem based on histopathology and immunohistochemistry. Metastases to mediastinum, pleura, lungs, liver, kidneys, omentum, mesentery, and multiple lymph nodes were present. Soft-tissue sarcomas are reported infrequently in children and young dogs. The cell of origin often is difficult to determine due to poor differentiation and rapid growth of these neoplasms.


Spinal Cord ◽  
1990 ◽  
Vol 28 (2) ◽  
pp. 119-129 ◽  
Author(s):  
J R Taylor ◽  
L T Twomey ◽  
M Corker

Processes ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 7 (6) ◽  
pp. 374 ◽  
Author(s):  
Brian Bolto ◽  
Zongli Xie

The use of flotation for the treatment of wastewaters in general, but especially for the removal of oil, grease, general organic matter, and suspended solids, is well established as a low energy process. Polyelectrolytes (PEs) can enhance performance without adding to the solids load that occurs with inorganic additives such as alum. The bridging of pollutants and the attachment of the resulting aggregates to the air-water interface can be effectively carried out with most wastewaters. Hydrophobic modification of the PEs can be useful for difficult species. It should be applied to the flotation of polyfluoroalkyl substances, for example, as they are not amenable to economical conventional treatment. Similarly, the removal of microplastic particles from sewage effluents by flotation could be enhanced.


2020 ◽  
Vol 23 ◽  
pp. 200423
Author(s):  
Chihiro Tanaka ◽  
Hajime Utsuno ◽  
Yohsuke Makino ◽  
Saki Minegishi ◽  
Jun Ota ◽  
...  

1997 ◽  
Vol 31 (1) ◽  
pp. 74-80 ◽  
Author(s):  
F. A. R. van den Broek ◽  
R. B. Beems ◽  
G. vanTintelen ◽  
A. G. Lemmens ◽  
A. X. M. Fielmich-Bouwman ◽  
...  

Dystrophic cardiac calcification (DCC) is a post-mortem finding in mice of various strains frequently used in biomedical research. The major aim of this study was to see whether DCC severity can be assessed by chemical analysis of calcium in the heart. Histological examination was used as the method of reference. Hearts of mice of four strains (BALB/c, C3H, C57BL/6 and DBA/2) were halved and the two resulting parts were subsequently subjected to histology or chemical analysis. Within hearts, the halves generally yielded similar results. The DCC scores and calcium contents were directly correlated within hearts. Thus, calcium analysis could serve as an alternative to histological examination in the assessment of DCC severity in mice. DBA/2 and C3H mice were found to be affected by DCC. Plasma magnesium concentrations were lower in these strains than in the DCC-free C57BL/6 and BALB/c strains. The tongue, lungs and diaphragm were also found to be calcified in DCC positive animals. Possibly, DCC is just one component of a generalized soft tissue calcification.


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Amy Shore ◽  
Rachel Wood

AbstractCloudina is a globally distributed Ediacaran metazoan, with a tubular, funnel-in-funnel form built of thin laminae (ca. 1–10 μm). To what degree local environmental controlled morphology, and whether early diagenesis controlled the degree of calcification of Cloudina, is debated. Here we test these hypotheses by considering assemblages from four, coeval localities from the Upper Omkyk Member, Nama Group, Namibia, from inner ramp to mid-ramp reef across the Zaris Subbasin. We show that sinuosity of the Cloudina tube is variable between sites, as is the relative thickness of the tube wall, suggesting these features were environmentally controlled. Walls are thickest in high-energy reef settings, and thinnest in the low-energy, inner ramp. While local diagenesis controls preservation, all diagenetic expressions are consistent with the presence of weakly calcified, organic-rich laminae, and lamina thicknesses are broadly constant. Finally, internal ‘cements’ within Cloudina are found in all sites, and pre-date skeletal breakage, transport, as well as syn-sedimentary botryoidal cement precipitation. Best preservation shows these to be formed by fine, pseudomorphed aragonitic acicular crystals. Sr concentrations and Mg/Ca show no statistically significant differences between internal Cloudina cements and botryoidal cements, but we infer all internal cements to have precipitated when Cloudina was still in-situ and added considerable mechanical strength, but may have formed post-mortem or in abandoned parts of the skeleton.


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