Find other sites about
-
The extremely well-preserved remains of a 66-million-year-old hadrosaur, known as a "dinosaur mummy," have just yielded soft-tissue skin structures and organic molecules, according to a new study. While research on other dinosaurs has led to the identification of organic material... more
Reviewed by kaolelo Jul 01, 04:22am ( 7 reviews ) • msn.com
-
Hodge
Hodge
707 Favs
-
PhreakHawk
PhreakHawk
9,296 Favs
-
mangoobo
mangoobo
4,040 Favs
Recently online -
imusica028
imusica028
195 Favs
-
jainneha2005
jainneh...
192 Favs
-
Saspeirs
Saspeirs
43K Favs
-
AceFire6
AceFire6
194 Favs
-
igorrogi
igorrogi
594 Favs
-
DevilsBastard
DevilsB...
3,760 Favs
-
darkside90
darkside90
1,932 Favs
- 4 reviews
- Reviews of the site
-
Join StumbleUpon or login to add a review!
-
Rated by NoFortunateSon on Jul 05, 2:17pm
They probably won't find anything, but who knows.
-
Rated by peanut626 on Jul 04, 9:32pm
woa pretty soon Jurassic park's gnna be in our backyard
-
Rated by mac888 on Jul 03, 8:37am
DNA's just around the corner
-
Rated by kaolelo on Jul 01, 4:22am
The extremely well-preserved remains of a 66-million-year-old hadrosaur, known as a "dinosaur mummy," have just yielded soft-tissue skin structures and organic molecules, according to a new study. While research on other dinosaurs has led to the identification of organic material linked to bones, co-author Roy Wogelius told Discovery News that "this is the first dinosaur to reveal intact skin structure and associated organic molecules."
