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View Full Version : Scientists recover T. rex soft tissue


Levi
03-26-2005, 10:02 AM
Holy Shit! :shocked: I have always loved dinosaurs.


http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/7285683

WASHINGTON - A 70-million-year-old Tyrannosaurus rex fossil dug out of a hunk of sandstone has yielded soft tissue, including blood vessels and perhaps even whole cells, U.S. researchers reported on Thursday.

Paleontologists forced to break the creature's massive thighbone to get it on a helicopter found not a solid piece of fossilized bone, but instead something looking a bit less like a rock.

When they got it into a lab and chemically removed the hard minerals, they found what looked like blood vessels, bone cells and perhaps even blood cells.

"They are transparent, they are flexible," said Mary Higby Schweitzer of North Carolina State University and Montana State University, who conducted the study.

She said the vessels were flexible and in some cases their contents could be squeezed out.

"The microstructures that look like cells are preserved in every way," added Schweitzer, whose findings were published in the journal Science.

"Preservation of this extent, where you still have this flexibility and transparency, has never been seen in a dinosaur before." Feathers, hair and fossilized egg contents yes, but not truly soft tissue.

Studying the soft tissues may help answer many questions about dinosaurs. Were they cold-blooded like reptiles, warm-blooded like mammals, or somewhere in-between? How are they related to living animals?

"If we can isolate certain proteins, then perhaps we can address the issue of the physiology of the dinosaur," Schweitzer said.

Of course, the big question is whether it will be possible to see dinosaur DNA. "We don't know yet. We are doing a lot in the lab now that looks promising," Schweitzer said.

To make sure she was seeing what she thought she was seeing, Schweitzer, a biologist by training, compared the Tyrannosaur samples with bone taken from a dead ostrich. She chose an ostrich because birds are thought to be the closest living relatives of dinosaurs and ostriches are big birds.

Both the dinosaur and ostrich blood vessels contained small, reddish brown dots that could be the nuclei of the endothelial cells that line blood vessels.

Taking the minerals out of both ostrich bone and the Tyrannosaur bone — a simple experiment that can be duplicated by anyone using a chicken bone, for example, and vinegar — yielded flexible fibers. Microscopic examination showed what look like bone cells called osteocytes in both.

jlacoy82
03-26-2005, 10:13 AM
Sweet! I wanted to be a paleontologist when I was a kid. ;) This is pretty cool.

Rayden
03-26-2005, 11:05 AM
Very cool. . .I just hope someone doesn't try that Jurassic Park stuff. I'd hate to wreck my Rex because I was dodging a Vilocaraptor(sp??) or a pile of T-Rex shit. Its always about how they use what they find.

icarusdown
03-26-2005, 01:43 PM
Very cool. . .I just hope someone doesn't try that Jurassic Park stuff. I'd hate to wreck my Rex because I was dodging a Vilocaraptor(sp??) or a pile of T-Rex shit. Its always about how they use what they find.

:grin:

modsHXcivi
03-26-2005, 01:52 PM
only levi ...would find this .....LOL

Tibs
03-26-2005, 02:06 PM
lets all thank levi for this wonderful just wonderful blah...

djwolford
03-26-2005, 03:27 PM
Awesome, but a t-rex is still no match for the pteradonnel or the dreaded tego;tar\

Rexinre
03-26-2005, 03:32 PM
That is out of control... I wonder if they are going to make one through the use of cloning? That would be off the hook!

c 1.5 rx
03-26-2005, 08:18 PM
^^^^^ i was thinking the same thing, i was reading the article only thing i could think of is cloning

delsoldude
03-27-2005, 08:33 AM
That is some cool shizit!!! I too wanted to be a Paleontologists