Australian Science Illustrated – Issue 51 2017

(Ben Green) #1
SCIENCE UPDATE

12 | SCIENCE ILLUSTRATED

Proteins found in 80-million-year-old fossil
PALAEONTOLOGY Scientists from North
Carolina State University in the US have
managed to find and extract proteins from a
80-million-year-old thighbone belonging to
the herbivorous duck-billed dinosaur
Brachylophosaurus canadensis. Finding
proteins in dinosaur bones is a scientific
milestone, and the discovery has attracted

attention from palaeontologists around the
world, paving the way for a brand new era
within fossil research. The ancient proteins,
which provide excellent clues of the past, will
allow scientists to place extinct species more
accurately on the family tree of life and to map
out their relationship with modern animals
such as birds and alligators.

53,000,000,


pixels – is the level of detail of pictures taken by NASA with new camera
technology, allowing Mars rovers to shoot sharp panoramic pictures.

Scientists have discovered the
collagen protein in a 80-million-
MARY SCHWEITZER/NORTH CAROLINA STATE UNIVERSITY year-old dinosaur bone.


NASA


SHUTTERSTOCK

SHOOTING STAR – Saturn


Probe takes extreme close-up of Saturn’s rings
NASA’s Cassini probe has taken a series of spectacular close-ups, which bring us closer
to Saturn’s unique rings than ever before, revealing unknown details about the rings,
which consist of billions of ice particles. This picture was taken from a distance of 51,000 km.

Seals can sleep
underwater. Gravity
makes a sleeping seal sink, but
after about 10 minutes, it
returns to the surface to
breathe without waking up.

The common seal is a
gifted tracker. The seal
has 40-50 super sensitive
whiskers on each side of its
muzzle. Each whisker has
about 1,500 nerves in the root


  • 10 times more than cats.


Seal milk has high fat
content (50%). In the
four weeks of infancy when
seal pips breast-feed, they
gain as much as 800-900 g a
day. A breast-feeding human
gains about 35 g per day.

And speaking of seals...


NEWS FLASH!
Whiskers give seals
super senses. The
common seal can spot a
flounder, even when it is
lying still under the sand.
The animal’s whiskers
pick up the tiny weak
water currents produced
by the fish’s gills.

BY THE WAY


BODY BUILDING BLOCKS
Proteins, which make up a vital
part of all organisms, are a kind
of biological building blocks.
Proteins are considerably
more durable than DNA.
The oldest DNA found by
scientists in a bone is only
700,000 years old.

COLLAGEN
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