The parasagittal walking legs are considered characteristic of mammals
, birds and bipedal dinosaurs. The hind legs in all these animals, as
well as the fore ones in quadrupedal mammals, include three segments,
movable relative to the ground in the contact phase, arranged in a zig
zag manner. Either scapula or tarsometatarsus was added as a third seg
ment to the ancestral two-segment leg structure. The third segment is
argued to be an energy-saving adaptation. It allows the reduction of t
he mechanical work of leg muscles against each other in the contact ph
ase, in which the struggle is shown to be inalienable in locomotion ov
er level ground at constant speed by means of voluntary choice of opti
mum segments' kinematics. The would-be optimum kinematical pattern is
deduced and appears to be rather close to that observed in reality. Th
e energy-saving role of muscles crossing more than one joint is discus
sed. The absence of the third segment in the walking legs of the lower
tetrapods, such as urodelans, lizards, etc, is argued to be associate
d with purely symmetrical locomotion in those animals. In this case th
e mechanical work of muscles against each other is kept low, owing to
the opposite direction of the elbow and knee bends.