13 October 2017
By Colin Barras
Dimetrodon, one of the most recognisable of
the pre-dinosaur predators, is due a makeover. For more than a century, it has
been depicted as a sluggish, belly-dragging beast with sprawling legs – but it
might actually have held its legs in a more upright position and kept its
stomach off the ground as it walked.
Often mistaken for a
dinosaur, Dimetrodon actually belonged to a group called the
pelycosaurs that were more closely related to mammals. It lived
between about 290 and 272 million years ago, with some species measuring more than 3 metres from
nose to tail. Its most iconic feature was a gigantic sail on its back, the
function of which is still debated.
Nineteenth Century artists
drew Dimetrodon as a sluggish-looking animal with legs sprawled out to each
side of its body, resting its weight on an enormous belly – and even in the
21st century nothing much has changed.
“I was baffled as I was going through the
literature how little this had been questioned,” says Caroline Abbott at the
College of William & Mary in Williamsburg, Virginia. It’s particularly
surprising given that the fossil trackways left by Dimetrodon seem to
tell a different story. The relatively narrow distance between left and right
sets of footprints suggest Dimetrodon did not have sprawling legs.
“That’s where the real head-scratcher is,”
says Abbott. “The trackways are more narrow than you’d expect and in a lot of
cases they lack belly dragging marks.”
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