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"any claws at the end of the leg" – Diplodocus? The thumb claw? I've read mention of that but used in kicking? Hmmm
From: dinosaurma...@googlegroups.com <dinosaurma...@googlegroups.com>
On Behalf Of Jaime Headden
Sent: June 17, 2026 3:28 PM
To: DinosaurMa...@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: [DMG] Re: would sauropods rear up and stomp down at predators as viable defense behavior?
…
But to the specific question, I did mention elephants can kick? A leg capable of supporting at any one time one quarter to one third of an animal's entire body mass in the 20+ ton range is going to have a phenomenal amount of power behind it. This was the point of Taylor, Wedel, and Cifelli naming Brontomerus "thunder thighs," opining that (tongue in cheek) a massive femoral retractor would confer a massive rearward swing of the hind leg. Now, we can quibble about the necessity of such a thigh for the sake of merely kicking, and not being the natural capability of an animal elevating its entire body weight on just the hindlimbs, but it stands that, the ability to support 20+ tons means each of your legs will hit like a truck. For an animal in motion, momentum adds to this and any claws at the end of the leg will become extremely dangerous, even if they're not "razor sharp" (which, let's be honest, they're used for digging, they're not going to be sabers but spades).
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