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How to Make a Dinosaur

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How to Make a Dinosaur STEP 1) Find a piece of amber with a blood sucking insect from the dinosaur era trapped in it. STEP 2) Extract the blood that insect sucked ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: How to Make a Dinosaur


1
How to Make a Dinosaur
  • STEP 1) Find a piece of amber with a blood
    sucking insect from the dinosaur era trapped in
    it.
  • STEP 2) Extract the blood that insect sucked
    from a dinosaur.
  • STEP 3) Use the dinosaur's genetic code (DNA)
    found in the blood cells as blueprints for
    another dinosaur. If pieces of the DNA are
    missing, fill in the gaps with frog DNA.
  • STEP 4) Use these blue prints to create a
    dinosaur egg.
  • STEP 5) Hatch the dinosaur in an incubator.
  • STEP 6) Raise the dinosaur to full size.
  • STEP 7) Enjoy!

2
  • Could we really use this formula to recreate
    dinosaurs?
  • If we can't today, could we reasonably expect
    our technology to get good enough that we could
    do it in the future?

3
  • Let's look at step one. The idea of getting
    dinosaur DNA from biting insects trapped in amber
    originated with George O. Poinar in the 1980's.
  • Amber is fossilized tree sap. Usually it is clear
    with a yellowish tint. Sometimes insects are
    trapped in the tree sap before it hardens. Some
    amber dates from the Mesozoic Era when the
    dinosaurs lived and it is not impossible insects,
    carrying dinosaur blood, might be trapped in
    amber.
  • Step one looks okay if we are willing to spend
    the time and money to search for the right pieces
    of amber.

4
  • Amber is extremely useful for ancient DNA
    research. In most fossilized bones the actual
    organic material has been replaced by minerals.
    Amber preserves the soft tissue of an animal,
    though, for vast amounts of time.

5
  • Step two is to remove the dinosaur DNA from the
    insect. DNA, often called the blueprint of life,
    is found in every cell in a living body. It is
    not unreasonable that we might be able to extract
    some dino DNA from the blood cells we recover.

6
  • After that, though, we run into trouble.
    Scientists have already extracted DNA fragments
    from an extinct weevil that was trapped in amber
    some 120 to 135 million years ago. Note that it
    was only a fragment of DNA of the weevil (less
    than one millionth of the entire sequence), and
    not the blood of something it bit.

7
  • A full set of DNA does carry the blue prints of
    the creature of which it is a part of. However,
    this code is made up of billions of individual
    "base pairs" (like letters in an alphabet) and
    the order of these are very important to the
    code.

8
  • DNA is relatively fragile and breaks down over
    time. The DNA we are likely to recover from the
    stomach of an insect will have disintegrated into
    tiny pieces and most of it will be missing.
    Unfortunately we cannot just replace the missing
    section with frog DNA. If we did that we would
    wind up with frog DNA with a few tiny dinosaur
    sections rather than dino DNA with a few frog
    sections.

9
  • It's going to be difficult for scientists to even
    be sure they have a fragment of dino DNA and not
    a part of the insect or contamination from
    something under the researchers fingernails.
    Remember nobody has ever seen dinosaur DNA before
    so we they can only identify it by comparing and
    contrasting it to DNA from animals alive today.

10
  • If we were going to fill in missing section of
    dinosaur DNA it would be more logical to borrow
    it from birds since they seem to be the closest
    living creatures to a dinosaur.

11
  • When we reach Step Three things really get
    difficult. DNA is often likened to a software
    program on a computer because it contains
    instructions on how to build a living creature.
    (Whereas the instructions in a computer program
    might tell the machine how to do your taxes.) To
    do something on a computer, though, you need not
    only the software, but the hardware (the computer
    itself) to run it. In the same way, we are
    missing the "hardware" needed to execute the DNA.

12
  • This would normally be a mommy dinosaur that
    produces an egg with the DNA in it. Unfortunately
    not any old chicken egg will do it. We need a
    dinosaur egg. Probably one from the same species
    we are trying to duplicate. Could we alter
    something like an Ostrich egg for this purpose?
    Maybe, but today we don't know how to do it, or
    what kind of changes are needed.

13
  • Assuming we do find some way past this obstacle,
    what's next? Hatching the dinosaur in an
    incubator. This we have plenty of experience
    with. If the eggs are good we can probably get
    them to hatch.

14
  • Now we have to raise our baby dinosaurs to
    adulthood. Our experience with raising other
    species will help. California condors in
    captivity were raised using puppets to play the
    parts of the parents. This way they did not get
    too comfortable with human beings and the
    transition to living on their own in nature was
    made easier. The logistics of providing an eighty
    foot long Apatasaurs puppet for this purpose
    might be difficult, but not insurmountable.

15
  • Still, we'd have to be concerned about the health
    of our dinosaur. What do we feed it? Many of the
    plants it ate back in the Mesozoic will be
    extinct themselves. What kind of new germs have
    developed in the past 65 million years to which
    our dinosaur has no resistance? What kind of
    medicine can we give our dinosaur if it gets
    sick? With no past history of dinosaur behavior
    to work from it will be hard to tell if our
    dinosaur is acting "normal" or not.

16
  • Even if we never are able to build a dinosaur
    from fossilized DNA scientists can still learn a
    lot about these creatures, and life in general by
    studying sections of ancient DNA to see how it
    has changed though the ages.
  • And who knows? If we can get past all these
    obstacles perhaps we can someday build a
    dinosaur. Meanwhile, until we do, we'll have to
    be satisfied with watching them in the movies.

17
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19
  • While getting DNA from dinosaurs is difficult,
    recovering it from more recently extinct species
    may be fairly easy. Hendrik Polinar of the
    University of Munich has managed to identify a
    Giant Sloth from the DNA in the creature's
    softball sized droppings. The dung was left in a
    cave near Las Vegas some 20,000 years ago. As
    time when on the DNA became "caramelized" as the
    protein and sugar molecules became intertwinded.
    This protected the DNA from decay. Polinar was
    able to later split the bonds and read the
    genetic sequences. Dispite the preservation much
    of the DNA material was still lost, though, and
    it seems unlikely that this process could be used
    to create a Giant Sloth for a "Jurassic Park."
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