because their feet are flat, soft from center and cover more area so they can easily walk in mud.i think it is proved by archemadies principle.
Make a model of a dinosaur foot, attach it to your feet, and walk in sand or mud.
Foraging in underwater mud
When you walk in the mud, your footsteps often produce a squelching or squishing sound as your feet sink into the wet ground, displacing the mud. This sound is typically accompanied by a slurping noise as your foot lifts out, creating a distinctive, often gooey auditory experience. The consistency of the mud and the force of your steps can amplify these sounds, making them more pronounced.
The "bean" on a duck refers to a small, oval-shaped structure located at the tip of the duck's bill. It is a part of the bill's anatomy and is especially prominent in certain species. The bean is used to help the duck forage for food, as it can sense the texture of items in the water or mud.
No, they are not. A marsh hen does not have webbed feet or a rounded bill. Some people alre refer to coots as a mud or marsh hen and they are separate as well.
When you walk in mud, it typically makes a squelching or squishing sound as your feet sink into the soft, wet ground. Each step can produce a wet, sloshing noise as the mud is displaced, often accompanied by a slight pop when your foot lifts out. The overall effect is a distinctive, squishy sound that evokes a sense of the soft, gooey texture beneath.
walk on the balls of your feet and dont slow down. it produces less suction so you get less stuck.
The shape of the platypus's bill helps it to scoop up food from the mud and silt on the bottom of creeks and rivers.
i know It's easier to walk on the pavement than to walk in the mud.
No, there legs are too weak to even walk in mud. There legs would snap they can only walk on plants and dry grounds.
Yes mud skippers lay eggs. Mud skippers are a type of fish that can use their fins to walk on land.
to make a splashing sound, to walk through mud ... sploshing through the mud.