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Published by C1ay 03-24-2005
Conventional wisdom among paleontologists states that when dinosaurs died and became fossilized, soft tissues didn’t preserve – the bones were essentially transformed into “rocks” through a gradual replacement of all organic material by minerals. New research by a North Carolina State University paleontologist, however, could literally turn that theory inside out.

Dr. Mary Schweitzer, assistant professor of paleontology with a joint appointment at the N.C. Museum of Natural Sciences, has succeeded in isolating soft tissue from the femur of a 68-million-year-old dinosaur. Not only is the tissue largely intact, it’s still transparent and pliable, and microscopic interior structures resembling blood vessels and even cells are still present.

In a paper published in the March 25 edition of the journal Science, Schweitzer describes the process by which she and her technician, Jennifer Wittmeyer, isolated soft organic tissue from the leg bone of a 68-million-year-old Tyrannosaurus rex.

Schweitzer was interested in studying the microstructure and organic components of a dinosaur’s bone. All bone is made up of a combination of protein (and other organic molecules) and minerals. In modern bone, removing the minerals leaves supple, soft organic materials that are much easier to work with in a lab. In contrast, fossilized bone is believed to be completely mineralized, meaning no organics are present. Attempting to dissolve the minerals from a piece of fossilized bone, so the theory goes, would merely dissolve the entire fossil.

But the team was surprised by what actually happened when they removed the minerals from the T. rex femur fragment. The removal process left behind stretchy bone matrix material that, when examined microscopically, seemed to show blood vessels, osteocytes, or bone building cells, and other recognizable organic features.

Since current data indicates that living birds are more closely related to dinosaurs than any other group, Schweitzer compared the findings from the T. rex with structures found in modern-day ostriches. In both samples, transparent branching blood vessels were present, and many of the small microstructures present in the T. rex sample displayed the same appearance as the blood and bone cells from the ostrich sample.

Schweitzer then duplicated her findings with at least three other well-preserved dinosaur specimens, one 80-million-year-old hadrosaur and two 65-million-year-old tyrannosaurs. All of these specimens preserved vessels, cell-like structures, or flexible matrix that resembled bone collagen from modern specimens.

Current theories about fossil preservation hold that organic molecules should not preserve beyond 100,000 years. Schweitzer hopes that further research will reveal exactly what the soft structures isolated from these bones are made of. Do they consist of the original cells, and if so, do the cells still contain genetic information? Her early studies of the material suggest that at least some fragments of the dinosaurs’ original molecular material may still be present.

“We may not really know as much about how fossils are preserved as we think,” says Schweitzer. “Our preliminary research shows that antibodies that recognize collagen react to chemical extracts of this fossil bone. If further studies confirm this, we may have the potential to learn more not only about the dinosaurs themselves, but also about how and why they were preserved in the first place.”

Source: NC State University
  #1 (permalink)  
By TeleMad on 03-25-2005
Re: NC State Paleontologist Discovers Soft Tissue in Dinosaur Bones

Quote:
Conventional wisdom among paleontologists states that when dinosaurs died and became fossilized, soft tissues didn’t preserve – the bones were essentially transformed into “rocks” through a gradual replacement of all organic material by minerals. New research by a North Carolina State University paleontologist, however, could literally turn that theory inside out.
Nope, that’s sensationalism (WOW! Isn't this exciting!!! A FIRST!!!). Scientists found soft tissue remains from a dinosaur several years ago, also reported in the journal Science.

Quote:
… seemed to show blood vessels, osteocytes, or bone building cells, and other recognizable organic features.
Nit pick, but osteocytes are not bone-building cell, osetoblasts are.
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  #2 (permalink)  
By BlameTheEx on 03-27-2005
Re: NC State Paleontologist Discovers Soft Tissue in Dinosaur Bones

Why on earth was this report not delayed for a full analysis? To limit analysis to a test for collagen strikes me as shoddy work at worst or impatience at best. DNA tests on the smallest of samples are now routine.
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  #3 (permalink)  
By C1ay on 03-27-2005
Re: NC State Paleontologist Discovers Soft Tissue in Dinosaur Bones

Quote:
Originally Posted by BlameTheEx
Why on earth was this report not delayed for a full analysis? To limit analysis to a test for collagen strikes me as shoddy work at worst or impatience at best. DNA tests on the smallest of samples are now routine.
They can just as easily report that later. The fact that soft tissue was found is news no matter if it contains DNA or not. I see nothing shoddy at all.
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  #4 (permalink)  
By BlameTheEx on 03-27-2005
Re: NC State Paleontologist Discovers Soft Tissue in Dinosaur Bones

Ok - I will go for impatience.
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  #5 (permalink)  
By C1ay on 03-27-2005
Re: NC State Paleontologist Discovers Soft Tissue in Dinosaur Bones

Quote:
Originally Posted by BlameTheEx
Ok - I will go for impatience.
What impatience? Why suppress the news that soft tissue with intact blood vessels has been found? Are you saying that's not news in and of itself? They could spend days, weeks, month's or more hunting for a scrap of intact DNA in that tissue or they might never find any at all. In that case, would you be happy if they just never reported the find at all? Your compulsion to label them shoddy or impatient makes no sense to me at all. The original news release is here though. Maybe you would like to contact the authors to let them know how you feel. Maybe they will even be compelled to check with you from now on before they release any more news. IMO, they have done a fine job and I look forward to any future discoveries they may find in further research on this tissue, DNA or not.
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