To work out how it might have moved researchers scanned the fossil in three dimensions and used this to construct a digital model of the Orobates' skeleton.
Miraculously, the art historian Andrew Tallon and colleagues scanned the cathedral in 2010 using LiDAR. At the time, their goal was to understand how the building was constructed.
Half an hour later, they had their brains scanned in an fMRI machine, while they tried to suppress some of these new memories in something called the Think-NoThink procedure.
In my hospital they're called Pyxis machines, where you need to actively get fingerprints, they'll scan your badge in order to get any kind of number of medications out.