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Messenger photo |
Katelyn Schlosser
Ohio University
professor Larry Witmer
prepares a rhinoceros
head for a CAT scan at
O’Bleness Memorial
Hospital. It was filmed
by a crew from National
Geographic. |
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In partnership
OU professor, O’Bleness team up for
research
RICHARD HECK
Special to The Messenger
[This story originally appeared in the
May 20, 2008 issue of
The Athens Messenger]
Ohio University professor Larry Witmer's
research on dinosaurs has
drawn national and international
attention, but lesser known is the role
that O'Bleness Memorial Hospital has
played in his research.
Late Saturday afternoon, a film crew
from National Geographic visited
the Athens hospital to document research
by Witmer as he, students
and hospital employees conducted a CAT
scan on the head of a rhinoceros.
Witmer has used the scanning equipment
at O'Bleness since 1996 to
peer inside the skulls of not only
modern animals, but those of
dinosaurs as well. National Geographic,
which was filming Saturday's
CAT scan as part of a special on bizarre
dinosaurs to air next year,
isn't the first film crew to visit
O'Bleness. The BBC, the History and
Discovery Channels and crews from Japan
and Germany have been
to the hospital to record the scanning
process Witmer and O'Bleness employee
Heather Rockhold routinely conduct at
the hospital.
"You never know quite what he'll bring
in," said Rockhold, who has provided her
technical skills to Witmer's research
for the past nine
years.
"It never ceases to amaze me on the
national and international credit
he receives," Rockhold said of Witmer's
research. "I just give him the data."
Witmer said Rockhold's expertise has
greatly added his research.
"Over the years she has gained
incredible expertise with scanning all
kinds
of objects, including rhinoceros
skulls," he said.
Giving a CAT scan to a rhinoceros head
or to a skull of a dinosaur
fossil millions of years old has taught
Rockhold many things, including
improving her technical skills for use
on human patients at the hospital, she
said.
"It makes me nervous sometimes,"
Rockhold said. "I'm used to the
high-end anxiety of patients, but the
specimens he gets, like a
dinosaur skull millions of years old, is
really something else."
Use of the scanning equipment, always
after hours and on weekends
so as not to interfere with hospital
patient care, enables Witmer to learn
about the insides of skulls to further
his research, Rockhold said.
Witmer uses the CAT scans to delve into
the skulls of dinosaurs to
learn more about the original soft
tissue that no longer exists in a
fossil.
"Using x-rays helps us to peer through
the rock and skull to look
inside," he said.
CAT scans and similar technology are
non-evasive on patients, and the
same holds true to the study of
dinosaurs, which Witmer refers to as
non-evasive paleontology.
"We can peer into a fossil millions of
years old without having to damage it,"
Witmer said. "It changes the way we view
fossils."
By converting the scans into computer
images, Witmer and his students
can construct computer models of the
interiors of dinosaur heads to
learn about their brains, ear
construction, nasal passages and a host
of
other information. Learning more about
the inner skull can provide a
better understanding of dinosaurs as
living and breathing animals, he
said.
Using modern day animals, like a
rhinoceros, the scanning helps
explain the layout of soft tissues, as
well as nasal and bone structure
which relate to dinosaur fossils, Witmer
said. Saturday's scanning
involved a study into how the rhino horn
connects and functions with the
skull bone, he said, which is important
because of the animal's similar size
to many dinosaurs.
Witmer, professor of anatomy and the
Chang Ying-Chien professor of
paleontology at OU's Heritage College of
Osteopathic Medicine's Department of
Biomedical Sciences, called Saturday's
scanning "very successful."
"We collected a lot of real data that
shows some real interesting things
about rhinos," Witmer said. The rhino
used in the experiment died a natural
death, of cancer.
As for conducting research with a film
crew recording the work, Witmer said
such exposure passes along to the world
the information he and
his students are learning.
"Part of my mission is to have our
findings presented to the people who
paid for it, the taxpayers," he said.
Witmer's research is funded through the
National Science Foundation. "It's
important to share our results
with the general public." |
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Ohio University
Heritage
College of Osteopathic Medicine
Grosvenor Hall, Athens, Ohio 45701
Tel:
740-593-2202 |
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