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Originally posted by jlc163
Scientists have told us for GENERATIONS that something that old WILL NOT have any "living tissue".
Anyway, it means one of several things:
1. Either this is not T-Rex DNA, or the T-Rex in question is MUCH younger than the timescale given, period.
The chances of rotting flesh being uncorruptible for that long more than borders on a miracle[/'quote]
Sicne we're not talking about rotting flesh that was miraculously uncorrupted, then thats not really relevant.
All the analysis published in the science literature by Mary H. Schweitzer and her colleagues through 1997 demonstrate that they have found a very well preserved bone that had little or no water penetration into the core area from where they drew their biomolecule samples. Schweitzer has told me that she was very surprised that the creationists would latch on to her work like this, as hers is not the oldest reported biomolecule data. In fact, there were prior publications of DNA extracted from samples twice as old as her T. rex sample (for example Polinar et al. 1994). There were also prior reports of immunological responses from biomolecules extracted from dinosaur bone, for example Muyzer et al. 1992.
There is actually little detailed information provided about the burial conditions of the samples analyzed by Muyzer et al (1992), and as Baumgardner (2001) can offer no additional data or references, his elaboration "in the geological settings in which they were found." is the purest fabrication. Baumgardner's (1995B) claim that "protein (referring to osteocalcin) in dinosaur bone buried in strongly leaching conditions in porous rock" had been recovered is dishonest. The only samples that received any detailed stratigraphic discussion in the original publication were two approximately contemporaneous fossils from the Upper Cretaceous, designated F38, and F39. These data indicated that the slightly younger bone (2.25 Ma younger) experienced greater absolute temperatures and higher matrix permeability to water. Significantly, this younger bone showed no preservation of osteocalcin at all. This is a direct contradiction of Baumgardner’s report of this research; the actual relationship is the more "leaching," the less protein preservation.
Originally posted by jlc163
*snort*
Scientists have told us for GENERATIONS that something that old WILL NOT have any "living tissue". Go look at the transitory models for how long it takes for things to get fossilized by their time scale.
Anyway, it means one of several things:
1. Either this is not T-Rex DNA, or the T-Rex in question is MUCH younger than the timescale given, period. The chances of rotting flesh being uncorruptible for that long more than borders on a miracle...
...and there's enough of those with the big bang. (reference to big bang being a miracle made by a prominant evolitionist in an article, not my words.)
2. You just posted something for Creationists to use in their never ending line of evidence against Evil-ootion. Wait until someone figures out a probability chart.
Originally posted by slank
.
If the cells are red-blood cells they won't have any nucleous or DNA. Maybe some mitocondrial DNA.
Structural proteins don't have any DNA do they?
They are basically inert fibers i think.
I have never heard of any method of taking an animal's protein and extrapolating the DNA sequence from it.
I am more inclined to think they will find living microbes on Mars then sequence this T-Rex.
poonchang
but, still, if they can reconstruct the proteins...just, WOW!
I could be interpreting this whole thing wrong, here's my take on it: they have found fossilized soft tissue. Organic material that has been mineralized. NOT the actual tissues, but a chemical "photograph" of them, if you will
While at first this may seem extraordinary preservation, Mary first uncovered this by seeing an unusual coloration on a section
of tyrannosaur bone, which she then analyzed more closely, resulting in the current study. In the paper, she notes how she looked at other fossils,
including the Wankel rex and "Sue," and found the tissues present there as well, except the resolution of detail was more profound and ubiquitous in Sue and the first specimen she tested, than in the Wankel rex. This means that the tissues may be more prevalent than realized because no one has explicitly tested for them. I beleive she has also looked at a hadrosdaur fossil and found similar traces, so the material preservation, while known currently from latest Maastrichtian time in the Hell Creek Formation, is not confined to either *Tyrannosaurus rex* or even theropods.
There are common proteins produced by many mechanisms and there are those more rarely expressed by unique metabolic
processes. Based on antibody reaction to protein presence, one can
infer (based on what occurs of course) what processes were involved in
the production of the particular protein. Metabolic pathways often
produce specific proteins. (I suspect that even most of these
proteins will be fragmentary as well.) Presence or absence of a
particular molecule may denote these processes and thusly an analogue can be made to modern equivalent metabolic activity.
Even some old viruses, bacteria and fungi might reanimate.
I also don't think that this will give any fuel to those literal folks
that grasp at straws to promote recent burial. There is nothing
contradictory to conventional geologic process here. Just a sealed time
capsule from the distant past. Without oxygen and bacterial action,
there is nothing to break down the tissues period. Presumably the
sealed bone was biologically sterile (except for virus' possibly) upon
burial. My only problem with the perfect sealed container idea is that
blood supply vessels got into the bone marrow through holes in the bone
which must have been sealed immediately by euxinic mud or similar
biologically sterile, non oxygen permeable muck.
Speaking of which, I remember reading a few years
back in a magazine
(Discover?) that isotopes in fossil ground sloth
bones suggested they had a
carnivorous diet.