In February, Dr. Lacovara had announced that the Paleontology department at Drexel would team up with the Engineering department for what would largely be a novel new project: scanning all of the fossils in the University’s collection (including some previously unidentified dinosaurs of Lacovara’s own finds in other parts of the world) using a 3D scanner. The Engineering department would then take those scans and use a 3D printer to create 1/10 scale models of the most important bones. But, he reported, that wouldn’t be the end of it: they intended, he said, to use those scale polymer “printouts” to model and then engineer fully working limbs, complete with musculature — to create, in effect, a fully accurate robotic dinosaur leg or arm, and eventually, a complete dinosaur.
I love living in the future!
Um this is incredibly cool.
Holy shit, this is AWESOME.
We all will love living in the future. UNTIL WE ARE EATEN BY ROBOT DINOSAURS THAT IS.
This is how Jurassic Park starts. Do you remember? The third one. They 3D printing the raptor vocal chord thing. And we...
You know, like what they did in Jurassic Park #3.