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Geological Magazine; January 2007; v. 144; no. 1; p. 211-216; DOI: 10.1017/S0016756806002962
© 2007 Cambridge University Press (CUP)
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Strain estimation from distorted vertebrate fossils: application of the Wellman method

JYOTI SHAH and DEEPAK C. SRIVASTAVA*

Department of Earth Sciences, Indian Institute of Technology Roorkee, Roorkee 247667, India

* Author for correspondence:dpkesfes{at}iitr.ernet.in

Distortion of the vertebral column in fossils can be used for the estimation of two-dimensional finite strain by a simple geometrical technique, namely the Wellman method. We demonstrate application of the Wellman method to the distorted vertebral columns of a reptile and a stem-chordate, and use the results to restore the undistorted fossil shapes by a computer graphic method. The Wellman method is particularly efficient in situations where independent evidence for the principal strain directions, or undistorted forms, are lacking. The method is purely geometrical, easy to use, and rapid. It involves relatively low error, and works even when only a small segment of the distorted vertebral column is preserved.

Key Words: vertebrate • distortion • finite strain analysis • restoration







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