Carnegie Mellon Rhombot Soft-Bodied Robot Fossil
Carnegie Mellon University researchers have developed Rhombot, a soft-bodied robot modeled after a 450-million-year-old fossil. The school teamed up with paleontologists from Spain and Poland to introduce Paleobionics, a field aimed at using Softbotics, or robotics with flexible electronics and soft materials.



By combining computational simulations and soft robots, a research team led by LeDuc and Carmel Majidi were able to recreate pleurocystitid, a marine organism that existed nearly 450 million years ago, new life. It is a member of the echinoderm class, which includes modern day star fish, and was one of the first echinoderms capable of movement using a muscular stem.

Lego Star Wars Death Star Trench Run Diorama 75329 Set for Adults, Room Décor Memorabilia Gift with...

Lego Star Wars Death Star Trench Run Diorama 75329 Set for Adults, Room Décor Memorabilia Gift with…

  • Recapture the drama of an iconic Star Wars: A New Hope scene with this Star Wars LEGO set for adults, part of build-to-display diorama models
  • Recreate the surface of the Death Star and the pursuit of Luke Skywalker’s X-wing by Darth Vader’s TIE Advanced fighter and 2 TIE fighters
  • To complete this Star Wars room décor piece, attach the plaque bearing the words “The Force is strong with this one,” as spoken by Darth Vader

Softbotics is another approach to inform science using soft materials to construct flexible robot limbs and appendages. A lot of fundamental principles of biology and nature can only fully be explained if we look back at the evolutionary timeline of how animals evolved. We are building robot analogues to study how locomotion has changed,” explained Majidi, lead author and professor of mechanical engineering,” said Phil LeDuc, Professor of Mechanical Engineering at CMU.

[Source]