homehome Home chatchat Notifications


Scientists analyzed the composition of dinosaur DNA -- and it's really similar to birds'

Life, uhm, finds a way.

Mihai Andrei
August 27, 2018 @ 11:03 pm

share Share

These two have much more in common than you’d think.

While bones and other fossils can be preserved for millions and millions of years, the same can’t be said about DNA. Despite what Jurassic Park might have you believe, DNA can hardly last one million years — and since dinosaurs went extinct some 66 million years ago, finding intact dinosaur DNA is not really a realistic expectation.

However, by starting from currently living species and using some creative maths, researchers were able to figure out what it probably looked like.

They started from modern-day turtles and birds — the first being one of the closest living relatives of the dinosaurs, and the latter being, well, dinosaurs — yes, birds are technically dinosaurs. Working backward from these modern species, Prof. Darren Griffin and colleagues at the University of Kent used mathematical techniques to identify the possible genetic characteristics of the earliest dinosaurs.

According to their calculations, the DNA of dinosaurs has remained quite stable through the ages and was very similar to the DNA shared by birds today. Essentially, dinosaur DNA, much like bird DNA, is organized into “chunks” called chromosomes. Birds have 80 chromosomes, which, relatively speaking, is a lot — for comparison, humans have 46, and frogs have around 20.

Birds are one of the most varied animal groups, and it’s partly owed to their large chromosome number. If dinosaurs shared the same feature, it could help explain why they also exhibit such a great variety — from horned vegetarian “tank” to small bipedal predator to true giants. But throughout all this variation, the overall structure of the DNA seemed to have remained stable over the years.

“Our results suggest that most elements of a typical ‘avian-like’ karyotype (40 chromosome pairs, including 30 microchromosomes) were in place before the divergence of turtles from birds ~255 million years,” the researchers write in the study. “This genome organisation therefore predates the emergence of early dinosaurs and pterosaurs and the evolution of flight.”

“This genomic structure therefore appears highly stable yet contributes to a large degree of phenotypic diversity.”

Griffin says that dinosaurs found a recipe for success — they found what worked from them, built a stable genetic basis, and from there, spurred a great deal of variation. But unfortunately for them, this wasn’t enough to help them survive the dramatic meteorite event 66 million years ago, which wiped the dinosaurs (and many other creatures) out of existence.

As for Jurassic Park — don’t get your hopes up. This study is a genetic calculation, we still haven’t found any dinosaur DNA — and we probably never will.

“We are not going to have Jurassic Park anytime soon,” Griffin told the BBC. “If you take the DNA of a chicken and put it into an ostrich egg you won’t end up with a chicken or an ostrich. You will end up with nothing. The same would be true of a velociraptor or a T. rex. It just wouldn’t work”.

The study has been published in Nature.

share Share

New Liquid Uranium Rocket Could Halve Trip to Mars

Liquid uranium rockets could make the Red Planet a six-month commute.

Scientists think they found evidence of a hidden planet beyond Neptune and they are calling it Planet Y

A planet more massive than Mercury could be lurking beyond the orbit of Pluto.

People Who Keep Score in Relationships Are More Likely to End Up Unhappy

A 13-year study shows that keeping score in love quietly chips away at happiness.

NASA invented wheels that never get punctured — and you can now buy them

Would you use this type of tire?

Does My Red Look Like Your Red? The Age-Old Question Just Got A Scientific Answer and It Changes How We Think About Color

Scientists found that our brains process colors in surprisingly similar ways.

Why Blue Eyes Aren’t Really Blue: The Surprising Reason Blue Eyes Are Actually an Optical Illusion

What if the piercing blue of someone’s eyes isn’t color at all, but a trick of light?

Meet the Bumpy Snailfish: An Adorable, Newly Discovered Deep Sea Species That Looks Like It Is Smiling

Bumpy, dark, and sleek—three newly described snailfish species reveal a world still unknown.

Scientists Just Found Arctic Algae That Can Move in Ice at –15°C

The algae at the bottom of the world are alive, mobile, and rewriting biology’s rulebook.

A 2,300-Year-Old Helmet from the Punic Wars Pulled From the Sea Tells the Story of the Battle That Made Rome an Empire

An underwater discovery sheds light on the bloody end of the First Punic War.

Scientists Hacked the Glue Gun Design to Print Bone Scaffolds Directly into Broken Legs (And It Works)

Researchers designed a printer to extrude special bone grafts directly into fractures during surgery.