Thread:Disgustedorite/@comment-32744161-20181225000445/@comment-32744161-20181226182105

Iudexkoo wrote: Also, I'm assuming that you think that when I said that the creature was primarily maintained by a hydrostatic skeleton, that there were no other forms of tissue involved. Nope Iudexkoo wrote: The head are could be a giant mass of muscle and the body be primarily hydrostatic driven. Organs can be placed in areas that aren't too exposed to too much movement, so yes near the head area. The head may be muscular, but the wing would be muscular too, as in real giant flying animals. Iudexkoo wrote: Also also, it is as much of a wing as a jelly's bell can be considered a wing. Which jellyfish fly actively in the air? Iudexkoo wrote: Also also also, their flight patterns were shown in the show. They move via propulsion of air from within the "bell" the form, as I've said, similar to that of a sea jelly. That is to say they contract the bell and push air beneath them to produce lift. You cannot say that it flies like a jellyfish, and immediately say why its method of flight is nothing like a jellyfish.