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Synchrotron research for the “dinobirds”

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Lynn Savage, Features Editor, [email protected]

Archaeology is all about the moment of discovery. One can follow the historical clues and look for visible cues for likely places to find buried treasure troves of knowledge, but the excitement comes when you dig and poke and brush and scrape away the earth to – at long last – uproot a prize specimen, whether a fossilized microflora, a whole skeleton of a heretofore unknown animal or something in between.

Almost since its inception, archaeology has embraced photography and other imaging techniques to build up the banks of knowledge derived from each finding, no matter how large or small. But until recently, archaeologists have not known that they could look deeply into the fossilized record to find traces of the chemicals left behind by once-living creatures.

Now, however, researchers using the Stanford Synchrotron Radiation Lightsource (SSRL) in Menlo Park, Calif., have used intense x-rays to probe one of the most famous of fossils, finding molecular clues to the biochemistry of the animal.

The scientists discovered the chemical record deep inside a specimen of Archaeopteryx, an animal that bridges the evolutionary gap between dinosaurs and modern birds. The researchers include Phil Manning and Roy Wogelius of the University of Manchester in the UK and Uwe Bergmann of the US Department of Energy’s SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory, home of the SSRL.

Normal imaging techniques, including computed tomography, had been used on the fossil since its discovery several years ago in Germany. Placing the fossil under the bright beam of the SSRL, however, showed that the fossil was more than bone and stone. The investigators found minute quantities of copper, zinc, sulfur and phosphorus – all elements necessary for dinosaur health or feather development in birds. Importantly, the concentrations of these chemicals differed between the fossil and the rock within which it is embedded, proving that they are not merely seeing material leached out of the stone but elements actually originating with the Archaeopteryx.

The technique, if followed up by other archaeologists in future projects, could provide very important supplementary information about the animals that roamed the globe millions of years ago.
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Published: July 2010
ArchaeopteryxarcheologyBasic SciencebiochemistryBiophotonicsbirdschemicalsdinosaursFrom The ClinicImagingPhil ManningPostscriptsRoy WogeliusSLAC National Accelerator LaboratorySSRLStanford Synchrotron Radiation LightsourceUniversity of ManchesterUwe Bergmannx-rays

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