Contrasts

Contrasts

Brian Trumbore has graciously given me a couple weeks off so

this will be my last column of 2001. I”ll be back on January 8,

2002. Accordingly, let me begin by wishing you a happy holiday

and a peaceful New Year, hopefully without any events like

those of September 11. On December 11, after watching the

White House ceremonies marking the 3-month anniversary of

September 11, we embarked on a drive to New York to see my

wife”s surgeon. Looking at the New York skyline, bereft of those

striking towers, I thought how small the Empire State Building

now seems. In contrast, when we first moved to New Jersey in

1952, the Empire State was the tallest building in the world and

we would gaze upon it in wonder.

The hospital where my wife had her surgery is only a dozen or so

blocks away from the surgeon”s office. I mentioned last month

that the drive home from the hospital following my wife”s

surgery took two and a half hours. In contrast, our follow-up visit

to the surgeon”s office was remarkable in that we made the

roundtrip in precisely three hours! This remarkable achievement

may be lost upon those unfamiliar with New York City traffic at

this, or for that matter, any time of year.

I recently mentioned in passing a very large crocodile. I”ve

since watched a National Geographic TV program about that

crocodile, Sarcosuchus imperator or, as it”s affectionately known,

SuperCroc. Actually, there”s nothing affectionate about this

crocodile, whose fossil remains were found last year in Niger in

Africa. This was one fearsome animal that was capable of

grabbing and subduing a moderately good size dinosaur. And it

probably did. SuperCroc was swimming around 110 million

years ago and dinosaurs nibbling on plants along the shore were

fair game.

SuperCroc was not just a big crocodile; it was huge. At 40 feet,

it was twice as long as any crocodile hanging around today. At

over 17,000 pounds, it weighed 10 times more than modern

crocs. To get to that hefty size it also lived a good bit longer. By

counting growth rings in the plates of armor on crocodiles, it is

estimated that SuperCroc lived to around 50-60 years.

One of the goals of the scientific effort on SuperCroc was to

make a realistic full-scale model of the beast, based on the skull

and bones dug up in Niger. In order to construct a realistic

model, the researchers made measurements of skull dimensions

and lengths on today”s crop of crocodiles and alligators. The

objective was to see how skull size correlates with length.

Another objective was to measure the force or pressure of the

bites of different size crocs and gators, again to find correlation

between size and nastiness of the bite. Reading about this

measurement in a journal or in National Geographic doesn”t fully

convey the risky nature of such measurements. The intrepid

scientist must place a rod containing the appropriate sensor into

the animal”s mouth in just the right position to get a good clean

bite. This looked hairy enough in a gator farm with an expert

holding the animal. What really impressed me was measuring

some of larger animals in settings where other crocs on the prowl

for a good meal were nearby. Indeed, the camera caught one

such beast lurching at the researcher, fortunately just bloodying

his leg. I would have taken up another line of work!

The full-size model resulting from this effort reveals an

unbelievably monstrous creature that looks quite capable of

snagging and handling a good size dinosaur. I just measured the

front of our house and found it to be close to 40 feet wide, the

length of SuperCroc. After watching the program, I”ve decided to

forego looking for any lost balls in or near water when I golf in

Florida next year. Those alligators lounging on the fairways will

get my full attention!

I was beginning to adjust to the existence of such a huge reptile

when I saw an article in the Star Ledger by Andres Cala of AP.

The article concerned another reptile discovered by Richard

Thomas of the University of Puerto Rico and Blair Hedges of

Penn State University. This reptile is not extinct but is living on

the Dominican Republic”s Beata Island, part of the Jaragua

National Park. It too is a reptile of quite an impressive size.

However, in contrast to SuperCroc, it only measures 1.6

centimeters (a bit more than a half inch) in length. This may not

sound impressive, except for the fact that it is reportedly the

smallest gecko ever found. Indeed, the article states that it is the

smallest of any known species of reptile, bird or mammal. A

photo shows this little lizard curled up neatly on a dime.

Back in July 2000 I wrote a column on how geckos crawl up

walls and walk on smooth glass ceilings upside down, thanks to

tiny hair-like projections from their feet and the many even

smaller split ends that actually contact the surface. The geckos

do not use suction cups to carry out their gravity-defying feats

but rely on molecular attractive forces. If you”re interested in

more details, you can pick up the column in the archives or

search the word “gecko” in this Web site”s homepage search box.

It occurs to me that such a tiny lizard must lay awfully tiny eggs.

In contrast, down in Argentina there”s a treasure trove of much

larger reptilian eggs that have survived for some 70-80 million

years. According to an item in the January 2002 issue of

Discover magazine, six “exquisitely preserved” embryos have

been found amongst thousands of dinosaur eggs. Surprisingly,

the eggs, the size of canteloupes, aren”t much bigger than ostrich

eggs. Yet some titanosaurs grew to 100 feet in length. The

embryos are a foot long and were about to be born when flooding

buried the nesting place and preserved its contents. The most

exciting thing about the embryos was that they contained

impressions of skin. The impressions clearly show typical skin

of a reptile with its scaly features. Other features, such as the

tiny teeth, about a tenth of an inch long, were also preserved.

We”ve been dealing with contrasts in size and travel times. Our

quest for rapid transport has led to the speeding jetliners which,

with their huge loads of fuel, we”ve seen can be turned to evil

purposes. In contrast, it”s refreshing to follow up on an aircraft

that moves no faster than the speed limit in most school crossing

zones. This is NASA”s Helios, a flying wing that is over 240 feet

long (6 times as long as SuperCroc) with 14 propellers and some

62,000 solar cells. It probably weighs less than your car. On

August 13, the unmanned Helios took off from the Hawaiian

island of Kauai and, at the blinding speed of about 25 miles per

hour, climbed to 96,863 feet. It then landed back at its base after

a 17-hour flight powered only by the sun. The flight was over

10,000 feet higher than the previous altitude record for an aircraft

not powered by rocket. The previous record was held by the SR-

71 spy plane, the world”s fastest jet.

At nearly 97,000 feet, the sky is almost black and you can see

stars during the daytime. The air is about a hundred times

thinner than what we”re used to on Earth”s surface. In fact, the

atmosphere is almost as thin as it is on Mars. Obviously, the

experience gained with Helios would be useful for future flying

missions over that planet. Here on Earth, if Helios can be made

to stay up for weeks or months, it would be much cheaper than

launching a telecommunications satellite. I suspect that the

environment would also benefit from the lack of rocket

emissions into the atmosphere. The challenge now is to make

lightweight fuel cells to store the sun”s energy and run the craft at

night.

The plane is piloted by remote control from the ground. I”ve

mentioned on occasion my friend Dan in Honolulu. Dan is a

flyer of model airplanes and when I was in Hawaii earlier this

year he took me out to watch his fellow enthusiasts fly their

planes. I suspect he”d die for the opportunity to hop over to

Kauai and pilot Helios!

Allen F. Bortrum