The world is one step closer to Cretaceous Sea World, the aquatic version of Jurassic Park.
Tissue from a 70-million-year-old marine lizard was recently extracted from ancient remains by a team from Lund University in Sweden.
Collagen protein, a type of connective tissue, was found inside the fossilized upper forelimb bone of the mosasaur Prognathodon, a long-dead relative of the monitor lizard.
BLOG: Dinosaur-era Marine Reptiles Were Warm-blooded
While this is not the first time proteins have been recovered from dinosaur-era remains, this is the first find of preserved tissues from a marine environment. And the first time they have been found in place in a fossil.
Earlier finds came from extracts of whole dinosaur bones preserved in sediments from what were once river floodplains.
BLOG: T. Rex Remains Contain Protein From Blood and Bone
In the journal PlosOne, the Swedish scientists detail their new mosasaur find. The researchers note that the earlier ancient protein extractions have been controversial, but note that their new research is backed up by several tests to corroborate the tissue's authenticity.
The researchers used infrared microspectroscopy, mass spectrometry and a chemical analysis of the ancient seagoing predator's remains to make sure what they had found was not contamination from bacteria or other modern sources.
IMAGE 1: Clidastes propython, a mosasaur from the Late Cretaceous of Kansas (Wikimedia Commons).
IMAGE 2: Bone matrix fibrils, or small fibers, in mosasaur bone: (a) Histologic preparation that shows how the fibers surround a vascular duct. (b) SEM-picture that shows etched fibers. (c) Detail of histologic preparation showing fibers encapsulated in bioapatite. (d) Histo-chemical stain (blue) showing that the fibers contain biological matter. (Credit: Photo by Johan Lindgren)
Tags: Extinct Animals, Late Cretaceous Dinosaurs, Paleontology, Prehistoric Animals, Prehistoric Era




comments ( )