And so in the 1870s he turned from graphing
the inner dynamics of the body to graphing the
phenomena that produce locomotion.
Here the primary difficulty was maintaining
contact with two, or in the case of the horse,
four moving legs, or two wings - movements that
are independent and created by the combined
motion of the body's different rods, joints, and
levers. By designing special shoes that
contained a hollow chamber connected by rubber
tubing to the receiving tambour and stylus,
Marey could trace on his revolving cylinder the
number, length, and frequency of steps and
variations of foot pressure on the ground.