dinosaur DNA

  • Scientists Find Chemical Markers of DNA in Calcified Cartilage of Duck-Billed Dinosaur
    Scientists Find Chemical Markers of DNA in Calcified Cartilage of Duck-Billed Dinosaur0

    In the 1980s, paleontologists found a dinosaur nesting ground with dozens of nestlings in northern Montana and identified them as Hypacrosaurus stebingeri, a species of herbivorous duck-billed dinosaur that lived some 75 million years ago (Cretaceous period). Now, a team of researchers from the United States, Canada, and China has investigated molecular preservation of calcified cartilage in one of the Hypacrosaurus stebingeri nestlings at the extracellular, cellular and intracellular levels. They’ve found chemical markers of DNA, preserved fragments of proteins and chromosomes in the dinosaur chondrocytes (cartilage cells). The findings further support the idea that these original molecules can persist for tens of millions of years.

  • What can we learn from dinosaur proteins?
    What can we learn from dinosaur proteins?0

    A clump of vessel-like structures Mary Schweitzer’s team extracted from a Tyrannosaurus rex bone that was almost completely demineralized could give us an answer.