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MIT Technology Review

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Robots are bringing new life to extinct species

MIT Technology Review
Summary
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85% Informative

In the absence of a living specimen, paleontologists build experimental robotic models of extinct animals.

Learning more about how they moved can shed light on aspects of their lives.

Modern technological advances are pulling paleo-inspired robotics into a golden age.

Researchers are moving closer to studying the kinds of behavioral questions that can be investigated only by bringing extinct animals back to life.

Ammonites were shell-toting cephalopods that lived during the age of the dinosaurs .

The only surviving ammonite lineage today is the nautilus.

From fossils alone, it’s not apparent how these ammonites fared in aquatic environments.

Researchers built a robot to study how ammonite shells influenced the underwater movement.

The shape-memory alloy is a kind of metal that deforms or keeps its shape, depending on the temperature.

Carmel Majidi , a mechanical engineer at Carnegie Mellon University , created the Rhombot .

VR Score

89

Informative language

90

Neutral language

55

Article tone

informal

Language

English

Language complexity

56

Offensive language

not offensive

Hate speech

not hateful

Attention-grabbing headline

not detected

Known propaganda techniques

not detected

Time-value

long-living

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