The Carnegie Mellon University Motion Capture Database was funded by a grant from the National Science Foundation. It contains over 2600 complex human motions. I have taken this data which was made available in July 2008 and translated it into BVH files with Poser Skeleton Bones and adjusted the joint rotations to work in Poser. These are high quality bvh files that can be used in Poser as animations.
Because of the volume due to the number and size of the animations, they have been broken into dozens of downloads available here on Share CG. Each zip file has a text document that describes all the files that are available in all the downloads. If you are interested in how to use these and how they were created visit http://mojodallas.blogspot.com/ to read the blog or visit my website at http://www.mojodallas.com/ to follow the adventures of a fellow modeler and animator in his journies in the Metaverse.
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and a big thumbs down to those ungrateful people posting whiney comments about a free gift being useless etc, works for most says it all they need to look at their own workflow and stop complaining about another's generosity.
For those asking for a list, the following link describes the motions :
http://sites.google.com/a/cgspeed.com/cgspeed/motion-capture/cmu-bvh-conversion/bvh-conversion-release---motions-list
and this is the original Carnegie Mellon mocap site :
http://mocap.cs.cmu.edu/
Pulling down these as fast as my dial up bandwidth will let me.
Is there a list anywhere of what each motion is?
Definitely lifting the animation maker`s heart... ;-)