Discovery Science - Secrets of the Dinosaur Mummy tag dsec
Added May 14, 2009Video Info
| By: | bill99201 |
| Category: | Films and Movies |
| Length: | 43:28 |
| Resolution: | 640 x 352 |
| Filesize: | 245 MB |
| Language: | English |
| Viewed: | 12272 times |
Back in 1999, a high school sophomore named Tyler Lyson spotted three dinosaur vertebrae poking out
...Back in 1999, a high school sophomore named Tyler Lyson spotted three dinosaur vertebrae poking out of the ground on his family’s land in North Dakota. Lyson was no ordinary teenager, but rather a paleontological prodigy who already had 20 dinosaur fossil finds to his credit. But it wasn’t until he returned to excavate the site five years later that he discovered that this one was no ordinary fossil. When he broke off a piece of the surrounding rock, he noticed an unusual pattern, which he initially thought might be a piece of an ancient plant. Instead, when he cleaned the sample back in his lab, he realized that it was an impression of the dinosaur’s scaly skin, shaped as if it was still part of the animal.
“That was really a thrill,” he recalls. “I knew there were other examples of smaller invertebrates being encased and the soft tissue being preserved. I figured that a significant portion of the animal might be out there in the rock.”
Indeed, Lyson had discovered what paleontologists suspect may be a virtually complete specimen of an Edmontosaurus, a three-and-a-half ton, 40-foot-long herbivore that roamed the wetlands that existed 67 million years ago in what is now the dusty, dry North Dakota badlands. Not just the skeleton, but fossilized remains of soft tissue as well, mummified by a mysterious process that scientists are still working to understand. It was an unprecedented find, one that had the potential to rewrite the existing body of knowledge not just about duckbills, but dinosaurs in general.
“Occasionally we’re very lucky and get a partial skeleton and in exceptional circumstances we get a complete skeleton articulated,” explains Phil Manning, head of the paleontology program at the University of Manchester in the UK, who is leading the effort. “That is the absolute ten out of ten for a dinosaur. Dinosaur mummies come in off the scale. These are so rare.”
Dakota, as the duckbill has been named, offers paleontologists a tantalizing chance to examine, for the first time, a near-complete three-dimensional specimen with muscle, skin and other organs intact–the closest we’ll ever come to a living dinosaur, outside of computer-generated ones in the movie Jurassic Park. To unlock Dakota’s secrets, scientists are employing an array of cutting edge technology, ranging from high-resolution three-dimensional laser mapping to recreate the environment in which it lived, to PET scanning of skin samples taken from the mummy in an attempt to identify proteins. They’ve excavated and transported the five-ton hunk of rock that encases the dinosaur mummy and transported it from North Dakota to a Boeing aerospace facility near Los Angeles, where scientists are subjecting it to the biggest and most difficult CT scan ever attempted.
The dinosaur mummy hasn’t been willing to yield its secrets easily. The autopsy has turned out to be an exceedingly difficult project, one in which scientists have had to endure numerous frustrating setbacks and summon every last bit of their ingenuity. While it remains a work in progress, the study of Dakota already has yielded significant new insights about the giant creatures who once ruled the planet. And at last, the team may be on the verge of a breakthrough that could reveal even more.
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SharkTime wrote 9 months ago: Those who pretend to engage in scientifi
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Those who pretend to engage in scientific endeavors have no courage or willingness whatsoever to challenge the ongoing and widely propagated myths of hairy apish figments of imaginations which are nothing more than artistic renderings with fine print always ignored by the unwitting malleable, uncritical pseudo-students, which states that such drawings are artistic depictions. To this day you will find such Pavlovian conditioning of the masses taking places thru failed schools and pseudo-scientific articles in publications still highly esteemed.
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SharkTime wrote 1 year ago: This is fascinating, and of course you w
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This is fascinating, and of course you will never see this story on the news to any sufficient level, nor will the major media disclose the results of the isotopic datings. It is on the same level of plesiosaur carcasses washing upon land and the plesiosaur caught by japanese fishermen and commemorated on a Japanese stamp. The reason why it's been preserved so well is because it isnt millions of years old. Dinosaurs died off after Noah's Flood from lack of sufficient post-flood vegetation and the drastic change in climate, then became virtually extinct during medieval periods when many would defeat the remaining dragons as feats of courage. A lot of the dinosaurs became preserved during the Flood from sudden burial eventually into tar or permafrost (petrification too, but rare as a large volume). In fact, virtually all oil today is from deposits of organic material from animals and flora that died in the flood which were concentrated and pressurized in subterranean compartments.
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