Jurassic Park may be a reality at some point…
Seems a new milestone. However, the way we're going we won't be around long enough to fully explore this discovery.
We can tell the colors of feathers and fur due to chemicals preserved in fossils that just look like normal stone. It's like the claims they found 65 million year old "soft tissue" as if there's a chunk of raw meat in the rock from 65 million years ago, which it isn't. The fossil preserves the structure and trace chemicals, it's still fucking rock.
There might be enough information to restructure the DNA, if they use guides from the DNA of extant species like birds that are the descendants of dinosaurs.
I don't for a second entertain the notion that this will remotely resemble Jurassic Park.
Decades if not centuries before we reconstruct a 125 million year old species we'll bring back mammoths and carrier pigeons and the Tasmanian wolf. Even before we bring back other species we'll start modifying our own DNA.
I fully expect human manipulation at some point, if not already occurring. I suppose they are trying some already, snipping out genes that carry certain medical conditions. It will start out for medical reasons and at some point get into looks and then athletics. Then, building a Khan.
Posted by JoeBKite-like structures in the western Sahara Desert.
Posted by TriphidAn Aussie Indigenous Message Stick.
Posted by TriphidIndigenous Australian Aboriginal Rock art dated somewhere between 20 and 30 thousand years old.
Posted by TriphidIndigenous Australian Aboriginal Rock art dated somewhere between 20 and 30 thousand years old.
Posted by TriphidIndigenous Australian Aboriginal Rock art dated somewhere between 20 and 30 thousand years old.
Posted by TriphidIndigenous Australian Aboriginal Rock art dated somewhere between 20 and 30 thousand years old.
Posted by JoeBDortoka vremiri: A new species of Dortokid Turtle from the Late Cretaceous of the Hațeg Basin, Romania.
Posted by JoeBThe Cabeço da Amoreira burial: An Early Modern Era West African buried in a Mesolithic shell midden in Portugal.
Posted by JoeBMusivavis amabilis: A new species of Enantiornithine Bird from the Early Cretaceous Jehol Biota of northeastern China.
Posted by JoeBTorosaurus in Canada.
Posted by JoeBStone tools from the Borselan Rock Shelter, in the Binalud Mountains of northeastern Iran.
Posted by JoeBDating the Lantian Biota.
Posted by JoeBBashanosaurus primitivus: A new species of Stegosaur from the Middle Jurassic of Chongqing Municipality, China.
Posted by JoeBDetermining the time of year when the Chicxulub Impactor fell.
Posted by JoeBSão Tomé and Príncipe: Possibly the last country on Earth never to have been visited by a working archaeologist.
Posted by JoeBMambawakale ruhuhu: A new species of Pseudosuchian Archosaur from the Middle Triassic Manda Beds of Tanzania.