That is Ms. T. rex, buster!

Posted 2 June 2005 by

↗ The current version of this post is on the live site: https://pandasthumb.org/archives/2005/06/that-is-ms-t-re.html

The Schweitzer/Horner team that we have followed for years has released their newest result today.  They had raised a tremendous clamor among young earth creationists late last March when they announced that they had recovered flexible tissues identifiable as blood vessels, blood cells, and osteocytes from a Tyrannosaur rex femur. (See Dino Blood Redux).  At that time, they made a rather cryptic comment that there was something unusual about the gross architecture of the bone, and that they had a second paper already in review with Science.

The online supplemental data with their March article (Schweitzer MH, Wittmeyer JL, Horner JR, Toporski JK (2005) Soft-Tissue Vessels and Cellular Preservation in Tyrannosaurus rex. Science 307(5717):1952-1955) indicated that they had molecular data directly attesting to the evolutionary relationship between dinosaurs and birds.  At that time, I noted the direct contrast between creationist David Mentons complaint, “Why not compare the histology of the dinosaur bone to that of some living reptile? After all, dinosaurs are reptiles, (Ostrich-osaurus discovery?) and Jack Horners comment that, Birds are dinosaurs. 

Today we learn that the unusual gross anatomy from the interior of the MOR 1125 femur was immediately recognized by Schweitzer as Medullary bone.  Medullary tissue is a calcium-rich layer lining the inside of birds bone marrow cavities that develops during the egg-laying process.  The formation of medullary tissue is today uniquely avian and distinct from reptilian egg-laying biology.

The actually paper becomes available Friday, June 3rd.  We will look forward to reading it, and examining the creationists reactions in a following item.

2 Comments

steve · 2 June 2005

Now, this is a testable prediction. Which came first, the chicken or the egg? Evolution says the egg. ID, which is to say, the book of gesesis, says the chicken.

;-)

Ken Shackleton · 3 June 2005

So, does this mean that the T.Rex was really T.Regina and in the process of laying eggs? Or at least growing eggs?