Dragon forelimb placementAlien Griffin DesignDragon evolving from humanoid: Ice dragonHow to butcher your dragon?Dragon developmentCould this Very Specific Dragon Fly?Adaptations of a Very Specific Dragon to this Combination of Large Size and FlightAnti-Dragon armor, shields and melee weaponsHow much pneumatization is possible?Dragon flight musclesGiving dragons more flight muscle

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Dragon forelimb placement


Alien Griffin DesignDragon evolving from humanoid: Ice dragonHow to butcher your dragon?Dragon developmentCould this Very Specific Dragon Fly?Adaptations of a Very Specific Dragon to this Combination of Large Size and FlightAnti-Dragon armor, shields and melee weaponsHow much pneumatization is possible?Dragon flight musclesGiving dragons more flight muscle













6












$begingroup$


Most dragons (before Skyrim and GoT) had six limbs in total, four legs and a pair of wings.



The question is how would a dragon's forelimbs be placed? It's obvious they have good terrestrial capabilities, without having long noodle legs. But then there's the flight muscle, it needs lots of space and a large attachment site, same goes for the wings. But how should I put the front legs on the dragon so that it doesn't interfere with the wings' motion? Sure, those things only move during climb out, but it' still troubling. Whatever I choose should be compact.



How and where would the front limbs of the dragon connect to the rest of the skeleton?










share|improve this question











$endgroup$











  • $begingroup$
    Depends on the dragon's attitude in flight. The wings must attach to the spinal column so that when the dragon assumes the flight attitude the attachment is above the center of gravity (or maybe a little forward of it if the dragon has a suitable tail which can act as an airfoil). Conversely, if you fix the attachment of the wings to the spinal column you can assume that in flight the dragon will assume the attitude which brings the center of gravity below the wing attachment point. As for the muscles, they don't interfere; flight muscles attach most likely to the sternum, unlike limb muscles.
    $endgroup$
    – AlexP
    2 hours ago
















6












$begingroup$


Most dragons (before Skyrim and GoT) had six limbs in total, four legs and a pair of wings.



The question is how would a dragon's forelimbs be placed? It's obvious they have good terrestrial capabilities, without having long noodle legs. But then there's the flight muscle, it needs lots of space and a large attachment site, same goes for the wings. But how should I put the front legs on the dragon so that it doesn't interfere with the wings' motion? Sure, those things only move during climb out, but it' still troubling. Whatever I choose should be compact.



How and where would the front limbs of the dragon connect to the rest of the skeleton?










share|improve this question











$endgroup$











  • $begingroup$
    Depends on the dragon's attitude in flight. The wings must attach to the spinal column so that when the dragon assumes the flight attitude the attachment is above the center of gravity (or maybe a little forward of it if the dragon has a suitable tail which can act as an airfoil). Conversely, if you fix the attachment of the wings to the spinal column you can assume that in flight the dragon will assume the attitude which brings the center of gravity below the wing attachment point. As for the muscles, they don't interfere; flight muscles attach most likely to the sternum, unlike limb muscles.
    $endgroup$
    – AlexP
    2 hours ago














6












6








6





$begingroup$


Most dragons (before Skyrim and GoT) had six limbs in total, four legs and a pair of wings.



The question is how would a dragon's forelimbs be placed? It's obvious they have good terrestrial capabilities, without having long noodle legs. But then there's the flight muscle, it needs lots of space and a large attachment site, same goes for the wings. But how should I put the front legs on the dragon so that it doesn't interfere with the wings' motion? Sure, those things only move during climb out, but it' still troubling. Whatever I choose should be compact.



How and where would the front limbs of the dragon connect to the rest of the skeleton?










share|improve this question











$endgroup$




Most dragons (before Skyrim and GoT) had six limbs in total, four legs and a pair of wings.



The question is how would a dragon's forelimbs be placed? It's obvious they have good terrestrial capabilities, without having long noodle legs. But then there's the flight muscle, it needs lots of space and a large attachment site, same goes for the wings. But how should I put the front legs on the dragon so that it doesn't interfere with the wings' motion? Sure, those things only move during climb out, but it' still troubling. Whatever I choose should be compact.



How and where would the front limbs of the dragon connect to the rest of the skeleton?







science-based creature-design dragons bio-mechanics






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited 1 hour ago









Cyn

11.1k12453




11.1k12453










asked 3 hours ago









MephistophelesMephistopheles

2,1252934




2,1252934











  • $begingroup$
    Depends on the dragon's attitude in flight. The wings must attach to the spinal column so that when the dragon assumes the flight attitude the attachment is above the center of gravity (or maybe a little forward of it if the dragon has a suitable tail which can act as an airfoil). Conversely, if you fix the attachment of the wings to the spinal column you can assume that in flight the dragon will assume the attitude which brings the center of gravity below the wing attachment point. As for the muscles, they don't interfere; flight muscles attach most likely to the sternum, unlike limb muscles.
    $endgroup$
    – AlexP
    2 hours ago

















  • $begingroup$
    Depends on the dragon's attitude in flight. The wings must attach to the spinal column so that when the dragon assumes the flight attitude the attachment is above the center of gravity (or maybe a little forward of it if the dragon has a suitable tail which can act as an airfoil). Conversely, if you fix the attachment of the wings to the spinal column you can assume that in flight the dragon will assume the attitude which brings the center of gravity below the wing attachment point. As for the muscles, they don't interfere; flight muscles attach most likely to the sternum, unlike limb muscles.
    $endgroup$
    – AlexP
    2 hours ago
















$begingroup$
Depends on the dragon's attitude in flight. The wings must attach to the spinal column so that when the dragon assumes the flight attitude the attachment is above the center of gravity (or maybe a little forward of it if the dragon has a suitable tail which can act as an airfoil). Conversely, if you fix the attachment of the wings to the spinal column you can assume that in flight the dragon will assume the attitude which brings the center of gravity below the wing attachment point. As for the muscles, they don't interfere; flight muscles attach most likely to the sternum, unlike limb muscles.
$endgroup$
– AlexP
2 hours ago





$begingroup$
Depends on the dragon's attitude in flight. The wings must attach to the spinal column so that when the dragon assumes the flight attitude the attachment is above the center of gravity (or maybe a little forward of it if the dragon has a suitable tail which can act as an airfoil). Conversely, if you fix the attachment of the wings to the spinal column you can assume that in flight the dragon will assume the attitude which brings the center of gravity below the wing attachment point. As for the muscles, they don't interfere; flight muscles attach most likely to the sternum, unlike limb muscles.
$endgroup$
– AlexP
2 hours ago











3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes


















3












$begingroup$

Im not an avian biologists so i do not know if this configuration would be biomechanically sound, however it may prove to be some help to you.



A break down of the skin, muscle and bone layers of a dragonCredit to Christopher Stoll



Shown here is a break down of the skin, muscle and bone layers of Toothless from the How to Train Your Dragon series. This image clearly depicts how and where the bones connect and where the muscle attatches to the skeleton. As i mentioned, i am not an avian biologist so i do not know if this setup would actually be functional in the real world, you may very well be able to draw inspiration from this though.



Edit: As you specified for an image containing the pectoralis, i found another one that depicts it.



enter image description here
http://mythicalanimalscience.blogspot.com/2015/04/dragons.html






share|improve this answer











$endgroup$












  • $begingroup$
    As always, where's the pectoralis major?
    $endgroup$
    – Mephistopheles
    1 hour ago










  • $begingroup$
    @Mephistopheles I have found a further image that shows the pectoralis, does this help you in any way?
    $endgroup$
    – Liam Morris
    26 mins ago










  • $begingroup$
    @Mephistopheles Due to how it's positioned you cannot see it on the leg portion. It is hidden beneath what have to be the triceps as the attachment of the pectoralis is too high up. The weird "necktie" muscle is supposed to be the pectoralis major of the wings, but it's very small andhow it's positioned means it would move the front paws backwards and forwards with each wingbeat while losing some power. The second picture has the wingmuscles behind the front paws, which means the wings are farther behind and would have the dragon fly face downwards but it might work.
    $endgroup$
    – Demigan
    23 mins ago











  • $begingroup$
    Regarding picture #2 Thank's you just solved (almost) all of my problems!
    $endgroup$
    – Mephistopheles
    21 mins ago






  • 1




    $begingroup$
    @LiamMorris not an unsurmountable problem, but the artist of the drawing was so focused on the wings that he forgot to give the front paws proper joints. It can only move the paws straight forwards, and is very limited in it's motion. Again this isn't insurmountable. The artist also forgot to make the lower ribs stronger, as right now the sternum would be pulled into the abdomen and wreak havoc with the organs there with each wingbeat. an elongated ribcage would make the dragon walk very stiffly but allow it to fly without commiting seppuku.
    $endgroup$
    – Demigan
    8 mins ago


















2












$begingroup$

Split the forelimb.



Making a 6 limbed creature from a tetrapod body plan is tricky. WB stack is littered with efforts on this front. Here is a new idea.



First, comparative skeletal anatomy.



comparative forelimb skeletal anatomy



https://www.slideshare.net/OmerRasool1/comparative-anatomy-skeletal-system-71723331



Look at the whale. Now imagine splitting the distal forelimb into two limbs: one with the radius as core and the other with the ulna. The radius and associated digits (5 at baseline but you can add more digits; polydactyly is fine) becomes the robust wing, availing itself of the scapula and other support structures.



The ulna also has digits and is much less robust. It would not be a stocky limb to match the hindlimb but something more like a Tyrannosaurus. These small forelimbs would touch the ground and allow ambulation but for fast motion they are not the equal to the hind limbs.



Having powerful back legs, powerful wings and spindly forelimbs means these dragons would not look like Toothless or Smaug.



  1. Running at speed would be bipedal. The dragon would rear up and run like a bird. Wings might be used while running for propulsion or to jump. Some people think this use is how birds evolved wings in the first place.


  2. The small front limbs would lend themselves to more delicate manipulation. Dragons could sit up and have a smoke, or play cards.


  3. Front limbs might move during flight because they retain a connection to the humerus. Probably it would be some sort of rhythmic movement mirroring the wings.


  4. In general I think dragons are depicted as too robust. I picture this dragon as along the lines of a crane.






share|improve this answer









$endgroup$












  • $begingroup$
    What if I made the bone larger, but hollow, and used my graphene-magic on it?
    $endgroup$
    – Mephistopheles
    36 mins ago










  • $begingroup$
    All the bones should be hollow to reduce weight, bird style. Hollow long bones should not be too troublesome - mammals have hollow bones too, but use the space for bone marrow. Your dragon can make blood in its spleen and have air inside its hollow bones.
    $endgroup$
    – Willk
    13 mins ago


















1












$begingroup$

The problem with wings is the necessary amount of power to lift the creature.



This is a bird skeleton:



This is a bird skeleton



Note the size of the sternum (the bone that all your ribs connect to). It's massive in comparison to ours and stands far out of the chest while a human sternum is basically flat in comparison. This sternum is what your pectoralis major muscles are attached to (the chest muscles).



The sheer size is because the muscles attached to it, shown here:



bird muscles



These absolutely humongous muscles are required to lift the weight of the entire creature up in the air, and the larger the bird the more % of the bird must be pectoralis major muscles just to keep it in the air due to the square cube law, but you can ignore this for the sake of cool. Despite this suspension of belief on the part of the square cube law you still want a bodyplan that can handle 4 paws and 2 wings simultaneously.



Note how these skeletons lack a large scapula. In the first picture you can see it mentioned but it's tiny and largely immobilized because everything is focused on that up/down movement of the arms, not about reaching forwards, backwards, upwards or downwards.



Having to have muscles attached to the chest for these extra appandages would diminish the amount of muscles for your wings. You could slightly circumvent this through kinematic chains.



An example of a kinematic chain is your quadriceps of your leg, or any other muscle that moves over more than 1 joint in the body. If you have muscles pull on one end of the bone they are attached to, you can use that to pull on the quadriceps, the quadriceps us that to pull on the muscle one joint removed, allowing you to transfer the muscle power from one bodypart to another. You attach a portion of the pectoralis major muscles to the dragon's leg, and have muscles above it attached to the wing (likely an adapted version of the triceps, romboideus, one part of the deloideus and trapezius). When flying the leg will be pulled down in the same motion as the wings and the muscles above that will simultaneously pull on the wings, allowing you to transfer the muscle power that went into the leg into the wing as well. This isn't wildly efficient and would likely make the leg flop up and down with the wingbeats, but it's an option. Ofcourse if you time it right and pull just as hard on the leg as on the wings, the leg would effectively keep still during flight. Although you'd be better off pulling it in as it would stretch the muscles above it and with that pull the wings.






share|improve this answer









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    3 Answers
    3






    active

    oldest

    votes








    3 Answers
    3






    active

    oldest

    votes









    active

    oldest

    votes






    active

    oldest

    votes









    3












    $begingroup$

    Im not an avian biologists so i do not know if this configuration would be biomechanically sound, however it may prove to be some help to you.



    A break down of the skin, muscle and bone layers of a dragonCredit to Christopher Stoll



    Shown here is a break down of the skin, muscle and bone layers of Toothless from the How to Train Your Dragon series. This image clearly depicts how and where the bones connect and where the muscle attatches to the skeleton. As i mentioned, i am not an avian biologist so i do not know if this setup would actually be functional in the real world, you may very well be able to draw inspiration from this though.



    Edit: As you specified for an image containing the pectoralis, i found another one that depicts it.



    enter image description here
    http://mythicalanimalscience.blogspot.com/2015/04/dragons.html






    share|improve this answer











    $endgroup$












    • $begingroup$
      As always, where's the pectoralis major?
      $endgroup$
      – Mephistopheles
      1 hour ago










    • $begingroup$
      @Mephistopheles I have found a further image that shows the pectoralis, does this help you in any way?
      $endgroup$
      – Liam Morris
      26 mins ago










    • $begingroup$
      @Mephistopheles Due to how it's positioned you cannot see it on the leg portion. It is hidden beneath what have to be the triceps as the attachment of the pectoralis is too high up. The weird "necktie" muscle is supposed to be the pectoralis major of the wings, but it's very small andhow it's positioned means it would move the front paws backwards and forwards with each wingbeat while losing some power. The second picture has the wingmuscles behind the front paws, which means the wings are farther behind and would have the dragon fly face downwards but it might work.
      $endgroup$
      – Demigan
      23 mins ago











    • $begingroup$
      Regarding picture #2 Thank's you just solved (almost) all of my problems!
      $endgroup$
      – Mephistopheles
      21 mins ago






    • 1




      $begingroup$
      @LiamMorris not an unsurmountable problem, but the artist of the drawing was so focused on the wings that he forgot to give the front paws proper joints. It can only move the paws straight forwards, and is very limited in it's motion. Again this isn't insurmountable. The artist also forgot to make the lower ribs stronger, as right now the sternum would be pulled into the abdomen and wreak havoc with the organs there with each wingbeat. an elongated ribcage would make the dragon walk very stiffly but allow it to fly without commiting seppuku.
      $endgroup$
      – Demigan
      8 mins ago















    3












    $begingroup$

    Im not an avian biologists so i do not know if this configuration would be biomechanically sound, however it may prove to be some help to you.



    A break down of the skin, muscle and bone layers of a dragonCredit to Christopher Stoll



    Shown here is a break down of the skin, muscle and bone layers of Toothless from the How to Train Your Dragon series. This image clearly depicts how and where the bones connect and where the muscle attatches to the skeleton. As i mentioned, i am not an avian biologist so i do not know if this setup would actually be functional in the real world, you may very well be able to draw inspiration from this though.



    Edit: As you specified for an image containing the pectoralis, i found another one that depicts it.



    enter image description here
    http://mythicalanimalscience.blogspot.com/2015/04/dragons.html






    share|improve this answer











    $endgroup$












    • $begingroup$
      As always, where's the pectoralis major?
      $endgroup$
      – Mephistopheles
      1 hour ago










    • $begingroup$
      @Mephistopheles I have found a further image that shows the pectoralis, does this help you in any way?
      $endgroup$
      – Liam Morris
      26 mins ago










    • $begingroup$
      @Mephistopheles Due to how it's positioned you cannot see it on the leg portion. It is hidden beneath what have to be the triceps as the attachment of the pectoralis is too high up. The weird "necktie" muscle is supposed to be the pectoralis major of the wings, but it's very small andhow it's positioned means it would move the front paws backwards and forwards with each wingbeat while losing some power. The second picture has the wingmuscles behind the front paws, which means the wings are farther behind and would have the dragon fly face downwards but it might work.
      $endgroup$
      – Demigan
      23 mins ago











    • $begingroup$
      Regarding picture #2 Thank's you just solved (almost) all of my problems!
      $endgroup$
      – Mephistopheles
      21 mins ago






    • 1




      $begingroup$
      @LiamMorris not an unsurmountable problem, but the artist of the drawing was so focused on the wings that he forgot to give the front paws proper joints. It can only move the paws straight forwards, and is very limited in it's motion. Again this isn't insurmountable. The artist also forgot to make the lower ribs stronger, as right now the sternum would be pulled into the abdomen and wreak havoc with the organs there with each wingbeat. an elongated ribcage would make the dragon walk very stiffly but allow it to fly without commiting seppuku.
      $endgroup$
      – Demigan
      8 mins ago













    3












    3








    3





    $begingroup$

    Im not an avian biologists so i do not know if this configuration would be biomechanically sound, however it may prove to be some help to you.



    A break down of the skin, muscle and bone layers of a dragonCredit to Christopher Stoll



    Shown here is a break down of the skin, muscle and bone layers of Toothless from the How to Train Your Dragon series. This image clearly depicts how and where the bones connect and where the muscle attatches to the skeleton. As i mentioned, i am not an avian biologist so i do not know if this setup would actually be functional in the real world, you may very well be able to draw inspiration from this though.



    Edit: As you specified for an image containing the pectoralis, i found another one that depicts it.



    enter image description here
    http://mythicalanimalscience.blogspot.com/2015/04/dragons.html






    share|improve this answer











    $endgroup$



    Im not an avian biologists so i do not know if this configuration would be biomechanically sound, however it may prove to be some help to you.



    A break down of the skin, muscle and bone layers of a dragonCredit to Christopher Stoll



    Shown here is a break down of the skin, muscle and bone layers of Toothless from the How to Train Your Dragon series. This image clearly depicts how and where the bones connect and where the muscle attatches to the skeleton. As i mentioned, i am not an avian biologist so i do not know if this setup would actually be functional in the real world, you may very well be able to draw inspiration from this though.



    Edit: As you specified for an image containing the pectoralis, i found another one that depicts it.



    enter image description here
    http://mythicalanimalscience.blogspot.com/2015/04/dragons.html







    share|improve this answer














    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer








    edited 21 mins ago

























    answered 1 hour ago









    Liam MorrisLiam Morris

    931216




    931216











    • $begingroup$
      As always, where's the pectoralis major?
      $endgroup$
      – Mephistopheles
      1 hour ago










    • $begingroup$
      @Mephistopheles I have found a further image that shows the pectoralis, does this help you in any way?
      $endgroup$
      – Liam Morris
      26 mins ago










    • $begingroup$
      @Mephistopheles Due to how it's positioned you cannot see it on the leg portion. It is hidden beneath what have to be the triceps as the attachment of the pectoralis is too high up. The weird "necktie" muscle is supposed to be the pectoralis major of the wings, but it's very small andhow it's positioned means it would move the front paws backwards and forwards with each wingbeat while losing some power. The second picture has the wingmuscles behind the front paws, which means the wings are farther behind and would have the dragon fly face downwards but it might work.
      $endgroup$
      – Demigan
      23 mins ago











    • $begingroup$
      Regarding picture #2 Thank's you just solved (almost) all of my problems!
      $endgroup$
      – Mephistopheles
      21 mins ago






    • 1




      $begingroup$
      @LiamMorris not an unsurmountable problem, but the artist of the drawing was so focused on the wings that he forgot to give the front paws proper joints. It can only move the paws straight forwards, and is very limited in it's motion. Again this isn't insurmountable. The artist also forgot to make the lower ribs stronger, as right now the sternum would be pulled into the abdomen and wreak havoc with the organs there with each wingbeat. an elongated ribcage would make the dragon walk very stiffly but allow it to fly without commiting seppuku.
      $endgroup$
      – Demigan
      8 mins ago
















    • $begingroup$
      As always, where's the pectoralis major?
      $endgroup$
      – Mephistopheles
      1 hour ago










    • $begingroup$
      @Mephistopheles I have found a further image that shows the pectoralis, does this help you in any way?
      $endgroup$
      – Liam Morris
      26 mins ago










    • $begingroup$
      @Mephistopheles Due to how it's positioned you cannot see it on the leg portion. It is hidden beneath what have to be the triceps as the attachment of the pectoralis is too high up. The weird "necktie" muscle is supposed to be the pectoralis major of the wings, but it's very small andhow it's positioned means it would move the front paws backwards and forwards with each wingbeat while losing some power. The second picture has the wingmuscles behind the front paws, which means the wings are farther behind and would have the dragon fly face downwards but it might work.
      $endgroup$
      – Demigan
      23 mins ago











    • $begingroup$
      Regarding picture #2 Thank's you just solved (almost) all of my problems!
      $endgroup$
      – Mephistopheles
      21 mins ago






    • 1




      $begingroup$
      @LiamMorris not an unsurmountable problem, but the artist of the drawing was so focused on the wings that he forgot to give the front paws proper joints. It can only move the paws straight forwards, and is very limited in it's motion. Again this isn't insurmountable. The artist also forgot to make the lower ribs stronger, as right now the sternum would be pulled into the abdomen and wreak havoc with the organs there with each wingbeat. an elongated ribcage would make the dragon walk very stiffly but allow it to fly without commiting seppuku.
      $endgroup$
      – Demigan
      8 mins ago















    $begingroup$
    As always, where's the pectoralis major?
    $endgroup$
    – Mephistopheles
    1 hour ago




    $begingroup$
    As always, where's the pectoralis major?
    $endgroup$
    – Mephistopheles
    1 hour ago












    $begingroup$
    @Mephistopheles I have found a further image that shows the pectoralis, does this help you in any way?
    $endgroup$
    – Liam Morris
    26 mins ago




    $begingroup$
    @Mephistopheles I have found a further image that shows the pectoralis, does this help you in any way?
    $endgroup$
    – Liam Morris
    26 mins ago












    $begingroup$
    @Mephistopheles Due to how it's positioned you cannot see it on the leg portion. It is hidden beneath what have to be the triceps as the attachment of the pectoralis is too high up. The weird "necktie" muscle is supposed to be the pectoralis major of the wings, but it's very small andhow it's positioned means it would move the front paws backwards and forwards with each wingbeat while losing some power. The second picture has the wingmuscles behind the front paws, which means the wings are farther behind and would have the dragon fly face downwards but it might work.
    $endgroup$
    – Demigan
    23 mins ago





    $begingroup$
    @Mephistopheles Due to how it's positioned you cannot see it on the leg portion. It is hidden beneath what have to be the triceps as the attachment of the pectoralis is too high up. The weird "necktie" muscle is supposed to be the pectoralis major of the wings, but it's very small andhow it's positioned means it would move the front paws backwards and forwards with each wingbeat while losing some power. The second picture has the wingmuscles behind the front paws, which means the wings are farther behind and would have the dragon fly face downwards but it might work.
    $endgroup$
    – Demigan
    23 mins ago













    $begingroup$
    Regarding picture #2 Thank's you just solved (almost) all of my problems!
    $endgroup$
    – Mephistopheles
    21 mins ago




    $begingroup$
    Regarding picture #2 Thank's you just solved (almost) all of my problems!
    $endgroup$
    – Mephistopheles
    21 mins ago




    1




    1




    $begingroup$
    @LiamMorris not an unsurmountable problem, but the artist of the drawing was so focused on the wings that he forgot to give the front paws proper joints. It can only move the paws straight forwards, and is very limited in it's motion. Again this isn't insurmountable. The artist also forgot to make the lower ribs stronger, as right now the sternum would be pulled into the abdomen and wreak havoc with the organs there with each wingbeat. an elongated ribcage would make the dragon walk very stiffly but allow it to fly without commiting seppuku.
    $endgroup$
    – Demigan
    8 mins ago




    $begingroup$
    @LiamMorris not an unsurmountable problem, but the artist of the drawing was so focused on the wings that he forgot to give the front paws proper joints. It can only move the paws straight forwards, and is very limited in it's motion. Again this isn't insurmountable. The artist also forgot to make the lower ribs stronger, as right now the sternum would be pulled into the abdomen and wreak havoc with the organs there with each wingbeat. an elongated ribcage would make the dragon walk very stiffly but allow it to fly without commiting seppuku.
    $endgroup$
    – Demigan
    8 mins ago











    2












    $begingroup$

    Split the forelimb.



    Making a 6 limbed creature from a tetrapod body plan is tricky. WB stack is littered with efforts on this front. Here is a new idea.



    First, comparative skeletal anatomy.



    comparative forelimb skeletal anatomy



    https://www.slideshare.net/OmerRasool1/comparative-anatomy-skeletal-system-71723331



    Look at the whale. Now imagine splitting the distal forelimb into two limbs: one with the radius as core and the other with the ulna. The radius and associated digits (5 at baseline but you can add more digits; polydactyly is fine) becomes the robust wing, availing itself of the scapula and other support structures.



    The ulna also has digits and is much less robust. It would not be a stocky limb to match the hindlimb but something more like a Tyrannosaurus. These small forelimbs would touch the ground and allow ambulation but for fast motion they are not the equal to the hind limbs.



    Having powerful back legs, powerful wings and spindly forelimbs means these dragons would not look like Toothless or Smaug.



    1. Running at speed would be bipedal. The dragon would rear up and run like a bird. Wings might be used while running for propulsion or to jump. Some people think this use is how birds evolved wings in the first place.


    2. The small front limbs would lend themselves to more delicate manipulation. Dragons could sit up and have a smoke, or play cards.


    3. Front limbs might move during flight because they retain a connection to the humerus. Probably it would be some sort of rhythmic movement mirroring the wings.


    4. In general I think dragons are depicted as too robust. I picture this dragon as along the lines of a crane.






    share|improve this answer









    $endgroup$












    • $begingroup$
      What if I made the bone larger, but hollow, and used my graphene-magic on it?
      $endgroup$
      – Mephistopheles
      36 mins ago










    • $begingroup$
      All the bones should be hollow to reduce weight, bird style. Hollow long bones should not be too troublesome - mammals have hollow bones too, but use the space for bone marrow. Your dragon can make blood in its spleen and have air inside its hollow bones.
      $endgroup$
      – Willk
      13 mins ago















    2












    $begingroup$

    Split the forelimb.



    Making a 6 limbed creature from a tetrapod body plan is tricky. WB stack is littered with efforts on this front. Here is a new idea.



    First, comparative skeletal anatomy.



    comparative forelimb skeletal anatomy



    https://www.slideshare.net/OmerRasool1/comparative-anatomy-skeletal-system-71723331



    Look at the whale. Now imagine splitting the distal forelimb into two limbs: one with the radius as core and the other with the ulna. The radius and associated digits (5 at baseline but you can add more digits; polydactyly is fine) becomes the robust wing, availing itself of the scapula and other support structures.



    The ulna also has digits and is much less robust. It would not be a stocky limb to match the hindlimb but something more like a Tyrannosaurus. These small forelimbs would touch the ground and allow ambulation but for fast motion they are not the equal to the hind limbs.



    Having powerful back legs, powerful wings and spindly forelimbs means these dragons would not look like Toothless or Smaug.



    1. Running at speed would be bipedal. The dragon would rear up and run like a bird. Wings might be used while running for propulsion or to jump. Some people think this use is how birds evolved wings in the first place.


    2. The small front limbs would lend themselves to more delicate manipulation. Dragons could sit up and have a smoke, or play cards.


    3. Front limbs might move during flight because they retain a connection to the humerus. Probably it would be some sort of rhythmic movement mirroring the wings.


    4. In general I think dragons are depicted as too robust. I picture this dragon as along the lines of a crane.






    share|improve this answer









    $endgroup$












    • $begingroup$
      What if I made the bone larger, but hollow, and used my graphene-magic on it?
      $endgroup$
      – Mephistopheles
      36 mins ago










    • $begingroup$
      All the bones should be hollow to reduce weight, bird style. Hollow long bones should not be too troublesome - mammals have hollow bones too, but use the space for bone marrow. Your dragon can make blood in its spleen and have air inside its hollow bones.
      $endgroup$
      – Willk
      13 mins ago













    2












    2








    2





    $begingroup$

    Split the forelimb.



    Making a 6 limbed creature from a tetrapod body plan is tricky. WB stack is littered with efforts on this front. Here is a new idea.



    First, comparative skeletal anatomy.



    comparative forelimb skeletal anatomy



    https://www.slideshare.net/OmerRasool1/comparative-anatomy-skeletal-system-71723331



    Look at the whale. Now imagine splitting the distal forelimb into two limbs: one with the radius as core and the other with the ulna. The radius and associated digits (5 at baseline but you can add more digits; polydactyly is fine) becomes the robust wing, availing itself of the scapula and other support structures.



    The ulna also has digits and is much less robust. It would not be a stocky limb to match the hindlimb but something more like a Tyrannosaurus. These small forelimbs would touch the ground and allow ambulation but for fast motion they are not the equal to the hind limbs.



    Having powerful back legs, powerful wings and spindly forelimbs means these dragons would not look like Toothless or Smaug.



    1. Running at speed would be bipedal. The dragon would rear up and run like a bird. Wings might be used while running for propulsion or to jump. Some people think this use is how birds evolved wings in the first place.


    2. The small front limbs would lend themselves to more delicate manipulation. Dragons could sit up and have a smoke, or play cards.


    3. Front limbs might move during flight because they retain a connection to the humerus. Probably it would be some sort of rhythmic movement mirroring the wings.


    4. In general I think dragons are depicted as too robust. I picture this dragon as along the lines of a crane.






    share|improve this answer









    $endgroup$



    Split the forelimb.



    Making a 6 limbed creature from a tetrapod body plan is tricky. WB stack is littered with efforts on this front. Here is a new idea.



    First, comparative skeletal anatomy.



    comparative forelimb skeletal anatomy



    https://www.slideshare.net/OmerRasool1/comparative-anatomy-skeletal-system-71723331



    Look at the whale. Now imagine splitting the distal forelimb into two limbs: one with the radius as core and the other with the ulna. The radius and associated digits (5 at baseline but you can add more digits; polydactyly is fine) becomes the robust wing, availing itself of the scapula and other support structures.



    The ulna also has digits and is much less robust. It would not be a stocky limb to match the hindlimb but something more like a Tyrannosaurus. These small forelimbs would touch the ground and allow ambulation but for fast motion they are not the equal to the hind limbs.



    Having powerful back legs, powerful wings and spindly forelimbs means these dragons would not look like Toothless or Smaug.



    1. Running at speed would be bipedal. The dragon would rear up and run like a bird. Wings might be used while running for propulsion or to jump. Some people think this use is how birds evolved wings in the first place.


    2. The small front limbs would lend themselves to more delicate manipulation. Dragons could sit up and have a smoke, or play cards.


    3. Front limbs might move during flight because they retain a connection to the humerus. Probably it would be some sort of rhythmic movement mirroring the wings.


    4. In general I think dragons are depicted as too robust. I picture this dragon as along the lines of a crane.







    share|improve this answer












    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer










    answered 45 mins ago









    WillkWillk

    116k27219487




    116k27219487











    • $begingroup$
      What if I made the bone larger, but hollow, and used my graphene-magic on it?
      $endgroup$
      – Mephistopheles
      36 mins ago










    • $begingroup$
      All the bones should be hollow to reduce weight, bird style. Hollow long bones should not be too troublesome - mammals have hollow bones too, but use the space for bone marrow. Your dragon can make blood in its spleen and have air inside its hollow bones.
      $endgroup$
      – Willk
      13 mins ago
















    • $begingroup$
      What if I made the bone larger, but hollow, and used my graphene-magic on it?
      $endgroup$
      – Mephistopheles
      36 mins ago










    • $begingroup$
      All the bones should be hollow to reduce weight, bird style. Hollow long bones should not be too troublesome - mammals have hollow bones too, but use the space for bone marrow. Your dragon can make blood in its spleen and have air inside its hollow bones.
      $endgroup$
      – Willk
      13 mins ago















    $begingroup$
    What if I made the bone larger, but hollow, and used my graphene-magic on it?
    $endgroup$
    – Mephistopheles
    36 mins ago




    $begingroup$
    What if I made the bone larger, but hollow, and used my graphene-magic on it?
    $endgroup$
    – Mephistopheles
    36 mins ago












    $begingroup$
    All the bones should be hollow to reduce weight, bird style. Hollow long bones should not be too troublesome - mammals have hollow bones too, but use the space for bone marrow. Your dragon can make blood in its spleen and have air inside its hollow bones.
    $endgroup$
    – Willk
    13 mins ago




    $begingroup$
    All the bones should be hollow to reduce weight, bird style. Hollow long bones should not be too troublesome - mammals have hollow bones too, but use the space for bone marrow. Your dragon can make blood in its spleen and have air inside its hollow bones.
    $endgroup$
    – Willk
    13 mins ago











    1












    $begingroup$

    The problem with wings is the necessary amount of power to lift the creature.



    This is a bird skeleton:



    This is a bird skeleton



    Note the size of the sternum (the bone that all your ribs connect to). It's massive in comparison to ours and stands far out of the chest while a human sternum is basically flat in comparison. This sternum is what your pectoralis major muscles are attached to (the chest muscles).



    The sheer size is because the muscles attached to it, shown here:



    bird muscles



    These absolutely humongous muscles are required to lift the weight of the entire creature up in the air, and the larger the bird the more % of the bird must be pectoralis major muscles just to keep it in the air due to the square cube law, but you can ignore this for the sake of cool. Despite this suspension of belief on the part of the square cube law you still want a bodyplan that can handle 4 paws and 2 wings simultaneously.



    Note how these skeletons lack a large scapula. In the first picture you can see it mentioned but it's tiny and largely immobilized because everything is focused on that up/down movement of the arms, not about reaching forwards, backwards, upwards or downwards.



    Having to have muscles attached to the chest for these extra appandages would diminish the amount of muscles for your wings. You could slightly circumvent this through kinematic chains.



    An example of a kinematic chain is your quadriceps of your leg, or any other muscle that moves over more than 1 joint in the body. If you have muscles pull on one end of the bone they are attached to, you can use that to pull on the quadriceps, the quadriceps us that to pull on the muscle one joint removed, allowing you to transfer the muscle power from one bodypart to another. You attach a portion of the pectoralis major muscles to the dragon's leg, and have muscles above it attached to the wing (likely an adapted version of the triceps, romboideus, one part of the deloideus and trapezius). When flying the leg will be pulled down in the same motion as the wings and the muscles above that will simultaneously pull on the wings, allowing you to transfer the muscle power that went into the leg into the wing as well. This isn't wildly efficient and would likely make the leg flop up and down with the wingbeats, but it's an option. Ofcourse if you time it right and pull just as hard on the leg as on the wings, the leg would effectively keep still during flight. Although you'd be better off pulling it in as it would stretch the muscles above it and with that pull the wings.






    share|improve this answer









    $endgroup$

















      1












      $begingroup$

      The problem with wings is the necessary amount of power to lift the creature.



      This is a bird skeleton:



      This is a bird skeleton



      Note the size of the sternum (the bone that all your ribs connect to). It's massive in comparison to ours and stands far out of the chest while a human sternum is basically flat in comparison. This sternum is what your pectoralis major muscles are attached to (the chest muscles).



      The sheer size is because the muscles attached to it, shown here:



      bird muscles



      These absolutely humongous muscles are required to lift the weight of the entire creature up in the air, and the larger the bird the more % of the bird must be pectoralis major muscles just to keep it in the air due to the square cube law, but you can ignore this for the sake of cool. Despite this suspension of belief on the part of the square cube law you still want a bodyplan that can handle 4 paws and 2 wings simultaneously.



      Note how these skeletons lack a large scapula. In the first picture you can see it mentioned but it's tiny and largely immobilized because everything is focused on that up/down movement of the arms, not about reaching forwards, backwards, upwards or downwards.



      Having to have muscles attached to the chest for these extra appandages would diminish the amount of muscles for your wings. You could slightly circumvent this through kinematic chains.



      An example of a kinematic chain is your quadriceps of your leg, or any other muscle that moves over more than 1 joint in the body. If you have muscles pull on one end of the bone they are attached to, you can use that to pull on the quadriceps, the quadriceps us that to pull on the muscle one joint removed, allowing you to transfer the muscle power from one bodypart to another. You attach a portion of the pectoralis major muscles to the dragon's leg, and have muscles above it attached to the wing (likely an adapted version of the triceps, romboideus, one part of the deloideus and trapezius). When flying the leg will be pulled down in the same motion as the wings and the muscles above that will simultaneously pull on the wings, allowing you to transfer the muscle power that went into the leg into the wing as well. This isn't wildly efficient and would likely make the leg flop up and down with the wingbeats, but it's an option. Ofcourse if you time it right and pull just as hard on the leg as on the wings, the leg would effectively keep still during flight. Although you'd be better off pulling it in as it would stretch the muscles above it and with that pull the wings.






      share|improve this answer









      $endgroup$















        1












        1








        1





        $begingroup$

        The problem with wings is the necessary amount of power to lift the creature.



        This is a bird skeleton:



        This is a bird skeleton



        Note the size of the sternum (the bone that all your ribs connect to). It's massive in comparison to ours and stands far out of the chest while a human sternum is basically flat in comparison. This sternum is what your pectoralis major muscles are attached to (the chest muscles).



        The sheer size is because the muscles attached to it, shown here:



        bird muscles



        These absolutely humongous muscles are required to lift the weight of the entire creature up in the air, and the larger the bird the more % of the bird must be pectoralis major muscles just to keep it in the air due to the square cube law, but you can ignore this for the sake of cool. Despite this suspension of belief on the part of the square cube law you still want a bodyplan that can handle 4 paws and 2 wings simultaneously.



        Note how these skeletons lack a large scapula. In the first picture you can see it mentioned but it's tiny and largely immobilized because everything is focused on that up/down movement of the arms, not about reaching forwards, backwards, upwards or downwards.



        Having to have muscles attached to the chest for these extra appandages would diminish the amount of muscles for your wings. You could slightly circumvent this through kinematic chains.



        An example of a kinematic chain is your quadriceps of your leg, or any other muscle that moves over more than 1 joint in the body. If you have muscles pull on one end of the bone they are attached to, you can use that to pull on the quadriceps, the quadriceps us that to pull on the muscle one joint removed, allowing you to transfer the muscle power from one bodypart to another. You attach a portion of the pectoralis major muscles to the dragon's leg, and have muscles above it attached to the wing (likely an adapted version of the triceps, romboideus, one part of the deloideus and trapezius). When flying the leg will be pulled down in the same motion as the wings and the muscles above that will simultaneously pull on the wings, allowing you to transfer the muscle power that went into the leg into the wing as well. This isn't wildly efficient and would likely make the leg flop up and down with the wingbeats, but it's an option. Ofcourse if you time it right and pull just as hard on the leg as on the wings, the leg would effectively keep still during flight. Although you'd be better off pulling it in as it would stretch the muscles above it and with that pull the wings.






        share|improve this answer









        $endgroup$



        The problem with wings is the necessary amount of power to lift the creature.



        This is a bird skeleton:



        This is a bird skeleton



        Note the size of the sternum (the bone that all your ribs connect to). It's massive in comparison to ours and stands far out of the chest while a human sternum is basically flat in comparison. This sternum is what your pectoralis major muscles are attached to (the chest muscles).



        The sheer size is because the muscles attached to it, shown here:



        bird muscles



        These absolutely humongous muscles are required to lift the weight of the entire creature up in the air, and the larger the bird the more % of the bird must be pectoralis major muscles just to keep it in the air due to the square cube law, but you can ignore this for the sake of cool. Despite this suspension of belief on the part of the square cube law you still want a bodyplan that can handle 4 paws and 2 wings simultaneously.



        Note how these skeletons lack a large scapula. In the first picture you can see it mentioned but it's tiny and largely immobilized because everything is focused on that up/down movement of the arms, not about reaching forwards, backwards, upwards or downwards.



        Having to have muscles attached to the chest for these extra appandages would diminish the amount of muscles for your wings. You could slightly circumvent this through kinematic chains.



        An example of a kinematic chain is your quadriceps of your leg, or any other muscle that moves over more than 1 joint in the body. If you have muscles pull on one end of the bone they are attached to, you can use that to pull on the quadriceps, the quadriceps us that to pull on the muscle one joint removed, allowing you to transfer the muscle power from one bodypart to another. You attach a portion of the pectoralis major muscles to the dragon's leg, and have muscles above it attached to the wing (likely an adapted version of the triceps, romboideus, one part of the deloideus and trapezius). When flying the leg will be pulled down in the same motion as the wings and the muscles above that will simultaneously pull on the wings, allowing you to transfer the muscle power that went into the leg into the wing as well. This isn't wildly efficient and would likely make the leg flop up and down with the wingbeats, but it's an option. Ofcourse if you time it right and pull just as hard on the leg as on the wings, the leg would effectively keep still during flight. Although you'd be better off pulling it in as it would stretch the muscles above it and with that pull the wings.







        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered 13 mins ago









        DemiganDemigan

        10.6k11052




        10.6k11052



























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