It turns out that soft tissue can be pickled in the equivalent of formaldehyde and that is good enough to preserve the material somewhat. The hope of course is to develop real DNA information. I think that we have at least ruled out impossible although practical may be decades away. I think that we will extract pieces of DNA that then can be mapped against modern birds. This can lead to the creation of an artificial genome allowing an actual ressurection of a genus.
This is really on the way to been an astounding performance in science and can only produce more surprises.
This is one more reason that I expect us to regenerate almost all extinct species before we are finished. Earth will have thousands of natural Refugia to harbor these animals. There really will be a Jurassic park in our future.
Controversial T. Rex Soft Tissue Find Finally Explained
By Stephanie Pappas, Senior Writer
November 26, 2013
November 26, 2013
http://www.livescience.com/41537-t-rex-soft-tissue.html
The controversial discovery of 68-million-year-old soft tissue from the bones of a Tyrannosaurus rex
finally has a physical explanation. According to new research, iron in
the dinosaur's body preserved the tissue before it could decay.
The research, headed by Mary Schweitzer, a molecular paleontologist at
North Carolina State University, explains how proteins — and possibly
even DNA — can survive millennia. Schweitzer and her colleagues first
raised this question in 2005, when they found the seemingly impossible:
soft tissue preserved inside the leg of an adolescent T. rex unearthed in Montana.
"What we found was unusual, because it was still soft and still transparent and still flexible," Schweitzer told LiveScience.
T. rextissue?
The find was also controversial, because scientists had thought
proteins that make up soft tissue should degrade in less than 1 million
years in the best of conditions. In most cases, microbes feast on a dead
animal's soft tissue, destroying it within weeks. The tissue must be
something else, perhaps the product of a later bacterial invasion,
critics argued.
Then, in 2007, Schweitzer and her colleagues analyzed the chemistry of the T. rex proteins. They found the proteins really did come from dinosaur soft tissue.
The tissue was collagen, they reported in the journal Science, and it
shared similarities with bird collagen — which makes sense, as modern
birds evolved from theropod dinosaurs such as T. rex.
The researchers also analyzed other fossils for the presence of soft
tissue, and found it was present in about half of their samples going
back to the Jurassic Period, which lasted from 145.5 million to 199.6 million years ago, Schweitzer said.
"The problem is, for 300 years, we thought, 'Well, the organics are all
gone, so why should we look for something that's not going to be
there?' and nobody looks," she said.
The obvious question, though, was how soft, pliable tissue could
survive for millions of years. In a new study published today (Nov. 26)
in the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences,
Schweitzer thinks she has the answer: Iron.
Iron lady
Iron is an element present in abundance in the body, particularly in
the blood, where it is part of the protein that carries oxygen from the
lungs to the tissues. Iron is also highly reactive with other molecules,
so the body keeps it locked up tight, bound to molecules that prevent
it from wreaking havoc on the tissues.
After death, though, iron is let free from its cage. It forms minuscule
iron nanoparticles and also generates free radicals, which are highly
reactive molecules thought to be involved in aging.
"The free radicals cause proteins and cell membranes to tie in knots," Schweitzer said. "They basically act like formaldehyde."
Formaldehyde,
of course, preserves tissue. It works by linking up, or cross-linking,
the amino acids that make up proteins, which makes those proteins more
resistant to decay.
Schweitzer and her colleagues found that dinosaur soft tissue is closely associated with iron nanoparticles in both the T. rex and another soft-tissue specimen from Brachylophosaurus canadensis,
a type of duck-billed dinosaur. They then tested the
iron-as-preservative idea using modern ostrich blood vessels. They
soaked one group of blood vessels in iron-rich liquid made of red blood
cells and another group in water. The blood vessels left in water turned
into a disgusting mess within days. The blood vessels soaked in red
blood cells remain recognizable after sitting at room temperature for
two years.
Searching for soft tissue
Dinosaurs' iron-rich blood, combined with a good environment for
fossilization, may explain the amazing existence of soft tissue from the
Cretaceous (a period that lasted from about 65.5 million to 145.5
million years ago) and even earlier. The specimens Schweitzer works
with, including skin, show evidence of excellent preservation.
The bones of these various specimens are articulated, not scattered,
suggesting they were buried quickly. They're also buried in sandstone,
which is porous and may wick away bacteria and reactive enzymes that
would otherwise degrade the bone.
Schweitzer is set to search for more dinosaur soft tissue this summer. "I'd like to find a honking big T. rex
that's completely articulated that's still in the ground, or something
similar," she said. To preserve the chemistry of potential soft tissue,
the specimens must not be treated with preservatives or glue, as most
fossil bones are, she said. And they need to be tested quickly, as soft
tissue could degrade once exposed to modern air and humidity.
Importantly, Schweitzer and her colleagues have figured out how to
remove the iron from their samples, which enables them to analyze the
original proteins. They've even found chemicals consistent with being DNA,
though Schweitzer is quick to note that she hasn't proven they really
are DNA. The iron-removing techniques should allow paleontologists to
search more effectively for soft tissue, and to test it when they find
it.
"Once we can get the chemistry behind some of these soft tissues,
there's all sorts of questions we can ask of ancient organisms,"
Schweitzer said.
2 comments:
Then again, maybe they are not that old? What man will go to to hide his sin! 64 million years?? Come on- man walked with the dinosaur, it is proven in the fossil record. The same fossil record that shows no proof that man evolved from an animal.
There is a God- and you are not Him!
I recall a scientist who recently found soft tissue in studying a triceratops fossil was fired for announcing the find. He posited that dinosaurs lived much more recently than paleontologists are claiming.
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