An animal in locomotion can be visually observed and contrasted from an animal in "non-locomotion" to fulfill the requirement for heuristic evidence. There is no need for further examination.
legs
Bipedal locomotion
Bipedal locomotion, Upright posture
D. walking on two feet
Walking on two legs.
Bipedal locomotion is a type of movement where the organism moves upright on two hind legs. An example of organisms using this kind of locomotion is humans.
Bipedal locomotion, snow cats, snow mobiles, airplanes, etc.
walking process is part of our body to move..
The major function of the hand in all vertebrates except human beings is locomotion; bipedal locomotion in humans frees the hands for a largely manipulative function.
No - a pig walks on all fours, so it is called a 'quadruped'. Quadrupeds move by quadrupedal locomotion.
so we can hold things and walk at the same time, multitasking
Bipedal Locomotion is the the act of an animal walking on its back two legs.