T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
244.1 | | PEN::KALLIS | | Wed Jul 24 1985 14:41 | 11 |
| "Arcana Caelestia": "arcana" = esoteric knowledge, usually not immediately
evident; hidden or obscure knowledge. "Caelestia" refers to the havens,
stars, or more modern perhaps, space. It is an archaic way of saying
approximately "esoteric celestial knowledge."
Steve Kallis, Jr.
P.S.: Depending on whether you're wearing a SF or F hat, the implications
are far different.
SK
|
244.2 | | AKOV68::BOYAJIAN | | Fri Jul 26 1985 05:27 | 23 |
| (John) Michael Crichton is his real name.
As John Lange, he's written a number of thrillers:
BINARY GRAVE DESCEND SCRATCH ONE
DRUG OF CHOICE * THE LAST TOMB THE VENOM BUSINESS
EASY GO ODDS ON ZERO COOL
* aka OVERKILL
As Jeffrey Hudson, he wrote a mystery:
A CASE OF NEED (1968)
Under his real name, he also wrote EATERS OF THE DEAD (quasi-fantasy) and
THE GREAT TRAIN ROBBERY. I think he has something else published under his
real name, but I can't recall.
He's also been a movie writer and director:
WESTWORLD (w/d) COMA (d) RUNAWAY (w/d)
--- jerry
|
244.3 | | PENNSY::CANTOR | | Fri Jul 26 1985 18:39 | 6 |
| re .0
"Arcana Caelestia" was chosen as the title for this notes file by its
founder and first host, Bob Wyman.
Dave C.
|
244.4 | | PULMAN::MCCAFFERTY | | Tue Aug 13 1985 09:30 | 3 |
| I believe the other Crichton novel was "Congo".
John
|
244.5 | LOOKER | MELODY::LAVNER | | Tue Sep 09 1986 15:27 | 1 |
| ANOTHER MOVIE HE WROTE AND DIRECTED WAS LOOKER
|
244.6 | LOOKER was great! | YODA::BARANSKI | Occam's Razor cuts Idiots down to size! | Wed Sep 10 1986 14:05 | 0 |
244.7 | Andromeda Strain | ALTHEA::ROSE | | Wed Sep 24 1986 17:25 | 14 |
|
I'm surprised there's not more about Andromeda Strain here!
Although I read it a long time ago, I remember it as one of the
fastest paced books I've ever read! It's long but you can almost
read it in one sitting! Very realistic and plausible, too. Very
detailed yet never boring. I though the explanations for the
biological, chemical, and space-oriented 'events' were great.
I really loved this book and thought the movie was great too.
Bob
|
244.8 | On video? | STKTSC::LITBY | My God, it's full of stars! | Thu Sep 25 1986 15:04 | 10 |
| (re: .-1)
I read the book a long time ago, and I sure agree it's fast-paced.
I actually read it straight through almost without stopping - I
remember being very tired the day after.
I haven't seen the film though - would anyone happen to know if
it's available on video? And in that case, on which label?
Per-Olof
|
244.9 | (eq (speed movie) (speed book)) | ALTHEA::ROSE | | Thu Sep 25 1986 17:01 | 11 |
|
If you do get a chance to see the film, don't miss it!! It goes
just as fast as the book! Very well done. Very beleivable, especially
if you've already read the book.
The second time I read it I almost did it in one sitting too! I
remember being up till about 3 a.m. and having only the conclusion
left for the morning (I knew how it ended!)
bob
|
244.10 | Eaters of the Dead | VAOU02::ACOATES | | Wed Jul 05 1989 17:53 | 4 |
| Has anyone read Crichton's new book "Eater's of the Dead"? One of my
customers tells me it's very good.
Andrew
|
244.11 | | RUBY::BOYAJIAN | Protect! Serve! Run Away! | Thu Jul 06 1989 03:31 | 6 |
| re:.10
EATERS OF THE DEAD is hardly new, it was first published in the
mid-70's. It's basically a re-telling of the Beowulf epic.
--- jerry
|
244.12 | | HPSTEK::XIA | | Sun Jul 16 1989 17:26 | 9 |
| Just read the Andromeda Strain for the first time. I have to say that
it is well written. It seems the author is well trained in Biology.
On the other hand, I am not impressed by his knowledge in physics. I
couldn't help laughing when he came up with the explaination of how the
organism obtains its energy, I couldn't help laughing. Admittedly, the
author is more rigorous, than 99.99% of the SF in the market, and the
story is very enjoyable.
Eugene
|
244.13 | Problems with Crichton | BMT::MENDES | AI is better than no I at all | Sat Jul 22 1989 00:26 | 8 |
| I read "The Andromeda Strain" and "Terminal Man", and was disappointed
with both. Crichton builds up a lot of tension with an imaginative
starting point, then ... just ends it. That was particularly true of
"The Andromeda Strain". "Well, I've milked this as much as I can. Gotta
end it sooner or later, I wonder how. Oh, yeah! That'll do it! OK,
what'll we work on next?"
- Richard
|
244.14 | SPHERE had even worse ending | ELRIC::MARSHALL | hunting the snark | Mon Jul 24 1989 09:51 | 16 |
| re .13:
> Crichton builds up a lot of tension with an imaginative starting
> point, then ... just ends it.
_Sphere_ really takes the cake in this regard. It had the most
disappointing ending I have ever read. What's even worse I could almost
tell that he was painting himself into a corner and would have to come
with some bad "deux ex machina" solution.
/
( ___
) ///
/
|
244.15 | Phew! | MOSAIC::MAXSON | Repeal Gravity | Thu Sep 21 1989 22:04 | 5 |
| Yes, SPHERE was probably among the top-ten worst novels I've ever
read. This just came out in paperback last year. It stinks on ice.
- MM
|
244.16 | a Dumb! book with a dumb ending | NEEPS::IRVINE | Bob Irvine @EDA | Tue Oct 10 1989 08:54 | 11 |
| It's a pity he didn't research a bit better! At 1000 ft the "hero"
would almost ceretainly have frozen to death when he exited via
the window and swam to the air lock. (in about 3 seconds!)
let alone hold his breath at this depth. A better research would
have also hinted that going form 30 atmospheres of exotic gasses
and trying to hold his breath at this depth would have killed him
also!
Bob
|
244.17 | People are Tough! | CAADC::SSGREGORY | Don Gregory @ACI | Fri Oct 13 1989 19:20 | 30 |
| re -.1
I agree that _Sphere_ wasn't memorable. In fact,
although I believe I read it, I don't remember much at
all!
However, I believe that water pressure at depth (in terms
of atmospheres) can be calculated as follows:
(feet/33)+1. So, 2 atmospheres at 33 feet, 3 at 66, etc.
At 1000 feet, we get about 31 atmospheres. (I suspect
the factor is not precisely 33 feet, so it might actually
be 30 atmospheres.)
If you inflate your lungs with gas at the same (or *very*
close to the same) pressure to the external environment,
then you *can* hold your breath if you enter that
external environment, at least until your body makes you
try to breath via CO2 buildup. Of course, you had better
not try to hold it if you ascend more than a few feet;
you'll rupture your lungs as the gases expand.
I don't know what the temperature of water is at 1000
feet, but it is not frozen (what's the freezing
temperature of salt water?). We're not talking liquid
nitrogen, here, are we? I believe that the human body can
withstand exposure to sub-freezing temperatures for at least
a few seconds without freezing critical parts. How long
is the character exposed?
Don G.
|
244.18 | The main problem is SHOCK.. | CHEFS::GOSSA | DON'T PANIC!!..Drink more tea! | Mon Oct 16 1989 05:32 | 9 |
| If I remember my school physics right water is at its most dense
at 4C. I think it's farly safe to assume that this the lowest possible
temperatue at 1000ft, since the world would have had to have frozen
over for there to be ice at this depth.
4C is COLD but you could survive in it. The russians go swimming
in melt water in moscow. His only problem would be surviving the
shock of immersion in the cold water.
- Andrew -
|
244.19 | pressure counts, too | DINSCO::FUSCI | DEC has it (on backorder) NOW! | Tue Oct 17 1989 20:04 | 12 |
| re: .18
> If I remember my school physics right water is at its most dense
> at 4C.
The complete statement would be that pure water at 1 atmosphere of pressure
is densest at 4 degrees C.
Salt water can get much colder than this. Note that throwing salt on ice
melts it. I vaguely (mis)remember 0 degrees F. to be the coldest
temperature you could get with salt and water (again, at 1 atmosphere of
pressure).
|
244.20 | 0F | ELRIC::MARSHALL | hunting the snark | Wed Oct 18 1989 12:12 | 15 |
| re .19:
> I vaguely (mis)remember 0 degrees F. to be the coldest temperature
> you could get with salt and water (again, at 1 atmosphere of
> pressure).
Right, in fact, that is the _definition_ of 0F; equal weights of snow and
salt. At the time of Mr. Fahrenheit, it was the lowest temperature
achievable in the laboratory.
/
( ___
) ///
/
|
244.21 | Beware ---- rathole detected!! | TROU03::BRAY | Fall is summer's gift to winter | Wed Oct 18 1989 15:44 | 10 |
| Re .20
> Right, in fact, that is the _definition_ of 0F; equal weights of snow and
> salt. At the time of Mr. Fahrenheit, it was the lowest temperature
> achievable in the laboratory.
And 100�F was defined as being normal body temperature -- which shows just
how accurate the Fahrenheit scale is!! :-)
Peter B.
|
244.22 | | AUSTIN::MACNEAL | Big Mac | Wed Oct 18 1989 16:20 | 5 |
| �And 100�F was defined as being normal body temperature -- which shows
�just how accurate the Fahrenheit scale is!! :-)
And Fahrenheit did this work how many years ago with what type of
equipment? And he was off by 0.4 degrees.
|
244.23 | water water everywhere... | USMRM4::SPOPKES | | Wed Oct 18 1989 18:12 | 19 |
| Regardless, the percentage of salt in the water is much less than
Dr. Farenheit acheived in the lab. While the coldest portions of
the ocean are probably a little less than 0 centigrade, it is not
much. And remember, humans are not such a pure solution either.
If water were compressible and the result was ice of similar density,
than ice would sink. It does not. Humans won't freeze at any depth.
Neither do fishes who have dissimilar, but not *that* dissimilar,
ion concentrations.
There is a most interesting fish that *can* be frozen: killifish.
They can be thawed without problems. They have a kind of natural
antifreeze that prevents crystallization from occurring.
A second thing is that since ice is *less* dense than liquid water,
increased pressure should have an effect. Would higher pressure
make it *more* difficult to freeze water? This is not true of many
other liquids.
steve popkes
|
244.24 | | ALIEN::POSTPISCHIL | Always mount a scratch monkey. | Thu Oct 19 1989 09:21 | 6 |
| Re .22:
100 - 98.6 = 1.4.
-- edp
|
244.25 | you got a permanent temperature ? | CURRNT::ALFORD | Ice a speciality | Thu Oct 19 1989 15:01 | 4 |
|
Re: .24
100 - 98.4 = 1.6
|
244.26 | You permanently hypothermic? | REVEAL::LEE | Wook... Like 'Book' with a 'W' | Thu Oct 19 1989 17:27 | 6 |
| re: .25
The only number I've ever heard is 98.6, so where you get 98.4 is a mystery
to me. Can you cite a reference?
Wook
|
244.27 | | CURRNT::ALFORD | Ice a speciality | Fri Oct 20 1989 05:24 | 9 |
|
Standard temperature of the human body in �F in the British Isles.
Maybe you have a slightly different measuring of �F in the States :-)
References....a thermometer :-)
it's one of those things I learnt at school along with 0�C = 32�F
etc...
|
244.28 | | REGENT::POWERS | | Fri Oct 20 1989 09:42 | 13 |
| "Normal" body temperature is an accepted(?) average of the population
at hand. Individual temperatures vary widely. I have two normal body
temperatures: something near 98.6 and something near 97.4.
I understand that 98.6 came to be accepted in the US because of a data
collection experiment held at the 1939 World's Fair, where zillions
of presumably (mostly) healthy people had their temperatures taken.
An apochryphal story, but it sounds like a World's Fair kind of thing to do....
- tom]
PS: also, 98.6F is exactly 37.0C - perhaps the attraction of the round
number in Celsius is the distinction between 98.4 and 98.6
|
244.29 | | CURRNT::ALFORD | Ice a speciality | Fri Oct 20 1989 09:59 | 10 |
|
> PS: also, 98.6F is exactly 37.0C - perhaps the attraction of the round
> number in Celsius is the distinction between 98.4 and 98.6
That sounds more like it....
It's the sort of expediency the Americans seem to resort to simplify
things.
(Please note the "seem" and I am generalizing !)
|
244.30 | | RUBY::BOYAJIAN | This is a job for Green Power! | Fri Oct 20 1989 12:21 | 4 |
| You're thinking of 98.4 because of all the ice you carry
around, CJ. :-)
--- jerry
|
244.31 | | CURRNT::ALFORD | Ice a speciality | Mon Oct 23 1989 08:36 | 2 |
|
I'm not *that* cold-blooded :-)
|
244.32 | Jurassic Park | ZENDIA::REITH | Jim Reith DTN 226-6102 - LTN2-1/F02 | Wed Feb 06 1991 14:02 | 15 |
| This has been idle long enough...
For Christmas my wife got me Jurassic Park. I found it very good and
was unable to put it down until I was done. The main plot centers
around Dinosaurs, Genetic Engineering, Supercomputers (slightly) and
what can go wrong, go wrong, go wrong... ;^)
I'm not particularly dino oriented but I found it very compelling and
enjoyed it throughout. A person I know (through work) read the book on
my recommendation (he's into dinos) and mentioned to a friend who's in
the special FX industry that it would make a good movie. Rumor has it
that Spielberg MIGHT in 3 years. Nothing like starting a good rumor ;^)
I'll be in line opening weekend when/if they do.
an 8 out of 10 IMHO
|
244.33 | Worth reading When It's Out in Paperback... | DRUMS::FEHSKENS | len, EMA, LKG2-2/W10, DTN 226-7556 | Thu Feb 07 1991 10:45 | 13 |
| I just finished it recently myself. I thought it was pretty good, but
every now and then there was an unnecessary howler that damaged the
overall impression. E.g., the graphs of dinosaur population have
points representing noninteger values (e.g., 5 1/2 dinosaurs!). Most
of the computer stuff is just gibberish aimed at snowing the computer
illiterate. The access tunnel used in a critical escape scene opens from
the outside but the not the inside? The connection to chaos theory is
tenuous to the point of being gratuitous.
It will make a good movie, that's fer sure.
len.
|
244.34 | | SFCPMO::FOX | | Wed Jul 31 1991 18:19 | 1 |
| Sounds a little like a variation on the "Westworld" theme.
|
244.35 | | FSDB00::BRANAM | Waiting for Personnel... | Thu Aug 22 1991 15:51 | 12 |
| IMHO, Crichton should have quit after "Andromeda Strain". This is a superb SF
thriller. "Sphere" on the other hand, is unmitigated crap. Over the years I
have read ANDROMEDA at least half a dozen times (seen the movie several more),
and always enjoy it. It was, in fact, the book that really turned me on to SF
back in 7th grade when I was techno-gadget crazy. It was the peak from which
he slid: "Terminal Man" was okay, but boring (the movie was worse). "Binary"
was excellent (it was also made into a "TV movie"), more of a spy thriller a la
Allistair MacLean and as exciting as ANDROMEDA, but "Zero Cool" was not nearly
as good. I'll get JURASSIC when it's out in paper since everyone here gives it
a good review, but I've just about given up on Mikey. Incidentally, I think he
is a Harvard-trained medical doctor, so that's why his biology is strong. But
the only physics bio majors know is EX-LAX!
|
244.36 | | RUBY::BOYAJIAN | This mind intentionally left blank | Fri Aug 23 1991 05:53 | 5 |
| But if he quit after THE ANDROMEDA STRAIN, we wouldn't have gotten
EATERS OF THE DEAD or THE GREAT TRAIN ROBBERY, both of which are
worthy reads.
--- jerry
|
244.37 | | FSDB00::BRANAM | Waiting for Personnel... | Fri Aug 23 1991 13:10 | 1 |
| I wasn't aware of EATERS, I'll have to check it out.
|
244.38 | Captivating book, but... | ELIS::BUREMA | Elen s�la lumenn omentilmo | Tue Sep 03 1991 11:28 | 39 |
| I have two problems with the book. I will put these behind a spoiler
warning because they will give away a lot if you have not read the
book.
Apart from the problems I liked the book very much and practically read
it in one sitting. I agree that it will make a great movie.
For action etc. 9 out of 10
For scientific content I reserve my options.
You *realy* want to know?
else hit NEXT/UNSEEN...
My two problems are:
1. The main premise is that dinosaurs are warm blooded and that insects
trapped in amber still contain dinosaur blood. But in cloning the
animals they use DNA from frogs and other COLD-blooded animals to
complement the DNA. Is this possible? Should the DNA not come
from a more related source? And in using DNA from a totally different
source, will it pass for instance the sex change capablity to the
dinosaurs? Etc. Etc. Is there someone out there with a degree in
biology to answer this?
2. This is more in the area if computer control and the like. If I had
a number of large and potentially dangerous animals behind electrified
fences, I would make *damn* sure that the fences stayed electrified, no
matter what. Leaving the this to only one (1), count them, one computer
is just plain silly. Especially with the way one half of the US is
sueing the other have for damages of some sort 8-). I woould have
liked the book much more if the would have been a more (to me at least)
plausible explanation for the dinosaurs to roam freely...
Comments anyone?
Wildrik
|
244.39 | Reply by Jim Reith | ELIS::BUREMA | Elen s�la lumenn omentilmo | Wed Sep 04 1991 03:14 | 42 |
| This is a mail I recieved re .38. I supplied a <FF> for him...
>From: ZENDIA::REITH "Jim Reith DTN 226-6102 - LTN2-1/F02 03-Sep-1991 1124" 3-SEP-1991 17:33:17.59
>To: ELIS::BUREMA
>CC:
>Subj: I'm not able to do <ff>s so...
>
> I figured I'd answer your Jurasic Park note with mail.
>
> Re: the Fence control...
>
> The backup to the fence was the isolation of the island. Yes, you had
> to round up the animal afterwards, but the computerized count and
> locator was supposed to help there.
>
> I'm not a biologist but I've been told that there are large sections of
> dormant DNA and the splices could have been in there areas. DNA is DNA
> as far as the amino acids are concerned. It really depends on how big
> the missing sections were. Presumably, they at least knew the length of
> the missing sections. They had several sources in an individual bug.
> Jim
Re. Fence control
If had been a research station I would have agreed, but this was to
be a major tourist trap. Can you imagine what would happen if the
control would fail on a crowded day...
Re. DNA
I thought the crucial point was that because frog and dinosaur DNA
was so similar that it could be used. However the main premise was
that dinosaurs are WARM-blooded. Frogs and other amphibians are
====
COLD-blooded. Also I'd be very wary of splicing in known DNA to
====
replace unknown strands, because what where the unknown sections
coding.
Wildrik.
|
244.40 | | LEDS::HORSEY | | Wed Sep 04 1991 16:44 | 8 |
| re: .38
Good point about the DNA - some think that the nearest living relatives
of the dinosaurs are Chickens; that if you watch a chicken walk and run
you have a good idea of how the dinosaurs would have looked on a scaled
up version. That is, the predatory ones. I have a couple of roosters
that have jumped up and spiked me from time to time, and I can just
imagine what those beady-eyed rascals could do if they weighed 400
pounds or more.
|
244.41 | original skin color my be difficult | DORA::MAYNARD | | Tue Sep 24 1991 19:02 | 7 |
| A popular theory currently going around town is that birds are a
direct decendent from dinosaurs. Much closer than amphibians,
and possibly closer than present day reptiles. But still this
hypothesis is based on bone studies. Since we have no DNA from those
ages, who knows. You could code up any number of variations base it on
any anumal and still have animals with the same kind of bone construction
as the original dinosaurs.
|
244.42 | | VMSMKT::KENAH | The man with a child in his eyes... | Wed Sep 25 1991 11:17 | 10 |
| It's more than bones -- the archeopteryx contains both bones and clear
feather impressions. The controversy isn't whether or not birds are
descendents of reptiles -- that's clearly borne out by the fossil
record -- the controversy centers on what family spawned birds, and
when.
There is another fossil that exhibits bird-like features (Drat! I can't
remember its name!) that is much older than archeopteryx.
andrew
|
244.43 | | FASDER::ASCOLARO | Not Short, Vertically Challenged | Wed Sep 25 1991 11:32 | 10 |
| FWIW, it is also generally accepted that Mammals are derived from
Reptiles.
I think that the arguments are how far back in time are the divisions.
Both the Mammal-Reptile and the Reptile-Bird branch are being pushed back
further and further, it seems with every major find from 150+m years
ago.
tony
|
244.44 | Dino DNA | VERGA::KLAES | Slaves to the Metal Hordes | Tue Jul 28 1992 18:48 | 37 |
| 0Article: 2931
From: [email protected] (Wayne Hughes)
Newsgroups: sci.bio,rec.arts.sf.science
Subject: Another _Jurassic Park_ mistake
Date: 27 Jul 92 22:28:54 GMT
Sender: [email protected]
Organization: Botany Department - U of Georgia, Athens
The following correspondence appeared in the recent issue of _Nature_
(A.C. Christensen and S Henikoff, Nature 358, 271 (1992)). We can
add this observation to the fairly lengthy list of mistakes already
made by Michael Crichton in _Jurassic Park_. (Reproduced without
permission.)
We have discovered a startling similarity between a dinosaur DNA
sequence reported in the novel _Jurassic Park_ and a partial
human brain cDNA sequence from the Venter laboratory described
in _Nature_ (Adams, M.D. et al., Nature 355, 632-634 (1992)).
The dinosaur sequence consists of duplication, with 117 base
pairs from the first member of the repeat aligning with the
human sequence, HUMXT01431, at the 95% level of identity with
only two gaps. The extraordinary degree of nucleotide sequence
conservation between organisms as distantly related as dinosaur
and human suggests strongly conserved function. Expression of
HUMXT01341 in human brain raises the possibility that the
dinosaurs were smarter than has been supposed, arguing against
the hypothesis that their extinction resulted from lack of
intelligence.
Our discovery also seems to raise the interesting legal question
as to whether the copyright on _Jurassic Park_ takes precedence over
the pending patent on the human sequence. However, it appears that
neither group is entitled to legal protection for its sequence,
because both sequences also align with cloning vector pBR322,
raising the possibility that both groups inadvertently sequenced
vector DNA.
|
244.45 | Getting closer to Jurassic Park | VERGA::KLAES | All the Universe, or nothing! | Fri Sep 25 1992 12:50 | 69 |
| Article: 3428
From: [email protected] (DOUGLAS A. LEVY, UPI Science Writer)
Newsgroups: clari.tw.education,clari.tw.science,clari.news.interest.quirks
Subject: 30-million-year-old termite DNA decoded
Date: Thu, 24 Sep 92 15:08:03 PDT
WASHINGTON (UPI) -- Scientists reported Thursday they have analyzed
the oldest genetic material ever -- DNA from a termite that crawled in
the Caribbean some 30 million years ago.
The work shakes up theories about termite and cockroach evolution and
busts the previous record for the oldest DNA studied, held by scientists
at Wayne State University in Detroit, who reported the analysis of DNA
from a 17-million-year-old magnolia leaf in 1989.
However, other scientists said they were working on different ancient
specimens, and DNA from fossils 200 million or more years old could be
sequenced in the near future.
Asked about the significance of his work on the termite, Ward Wheeler
of the American Museum of Natural History in New York cited the mere age
of the specimen.
``It is the oldest DNA to date characterized, which is kind of cool
in and of itself,'' Wheeler said. However, what they found also means
scientists can fill in gaps in theories of evolution.
``We can reconstruct extinction. We really need this molecular
information from fossils to understand what happened in the past,''
Wheeler said by telephone.
The report by Wheeler and colleagues David Grimaldi, Rob DeSalle and
John Gates in the journal Science suggests theories about termite
evolution need revision.
By comparing the ancient fossil termite DNA to DNA of modern termites
and other species, the scientists concluded that termites did not evolve
from cockroaches as previously thought.
While the tissues that made up the termite's body when it lived have
long since decayed, fossils may contain some of the organism's genetic
material, preserved by years of mineral deposits, Wheeler said.
Tiny thread-like coils of DNA -- deoxyribonucleic acid -- make up
genes, which carry the information to make a living being. Genes are
single units of heredity and are responsible for determining physical
characteristics.
The termite DNA was preserved in amber, a resin that encased the
termite, virtually freezing it in time by sealing out oxygen, bacteria
and anything else that could break it down.
That the DNA of 30 million years ago can be sequenced in the same way
DNA from living creatures can be sequenced makes it possible to analyze
ancient species using the most modern technology.
``The same chemistry of DNA that happens now happened years ago ...
That's what DNA looked like 30 million years ago,'' Wheeler said.
Other scientists are working on mapping DNA from even older fossils.
Brian Farrell of Cornell University and the University of Colorado at
Boulder said he was decoding DNA from 200-million-year-old fish fossils.
But Farrell said the effort was not to find the oldest DNA.
``It's a snazzy molecular biology trick, but you have to ask what you
can learn from it. The glamour of any discovery wears off pretty quickly
unless it explains something,'' he said.
|
244.46 | Armored dinosaur find named after Jurassic Park film | VERGA::KLAES | I, Robot | Tue Dec 08 1992 16:14 | 41 |
| Article: 2851
From: [email protected] (UPI)
Newsgroups: clari.tw.space,clari.news.interest.history
Subject: Oldest armored dinosaur found in China
Date: Mon, 7 Dec 92 14:08:03 PST
WASHINGTON (UPI) -- A squat, 10-foot-long, armor-plated
creature with a club tail that walked in northwestern China 170
million years ago is the oldest armored dinosaur yet identified, the
Dinosaur Society announced Monday.
The researchers said the dinosaur was smaller and lived about
80 million years earlier than its previously identified relatives.
Other club-tailed, armored dinosaurs grew to about 26 feet long.
The discovery emerged from fossils found by geologists
searching for oil in 1980 near the Tien Shan Mountains in China. The
find is to be reported in an upcoming Chinese scientific journal
Vertebrata Pal Asiatica.
Curator Dong Zhiming of the Institute of Vertebrate
Paleontology and Paleoanthropology in Beijing collected the skull,
armor plates and bones and identified them as one of a class of
dinosaurs known as ankylosaurs. Ankylosaurs lived on every continent
between 144 million and 65 million years ago, but the new species was
older, living during the Jurassic period, between 213 million and 144
million years ago, the researchers reported.
``It opens windows onto a lost Jurassic world and onto the
origins of one of the most successful of dinosaurs,'' said Don Lessem,
Dinosaur Society founder.
The Dinosaur Society, an organization formed by dinosaur
scientists and others to support dinosaur research, said the new
creature would be named ``Jurassosaurus nedegoapeferkimorum.'' The
name is derived from the first letters of the last names of each of
the actors starring in an upcoming Steven Spielberg film about
dinosaurs, ``Jurassic Park.''
Spielberg donated $25,000 to support dinosaur study in China.
|
244.47 | How about "Jurassosaurus spielbergi"? | CUPMK::WAJENBERG | Superficially normal. | Tue Dec 08 1992 16:24 | 7 |
| Re: ``Jurassosaurus nedegoapeferkimorum.''
To be popularly known as "Ned," in all probability. (Sheesh, what a
mouthful. I wonder if they'll get flak from the nomenclature
committees.)
Earl Wajenberg
|
244.48 | | DSSDEV::RUST | | Tue Dec 08 1992 16:25 | 3 |
| Wait'll we find out what "nedegoapeferkimorum" means in Etruscan. ;-)
-b
|