Download Dissolution of dinosaur bones in EDTA (Ethylenediaminetetraacetic Acid) often reveals... Tyler Bridges: Earth Sciences

Survey
yes no Was this document useful for you?
   Thank you for your participation!

* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project

Document related concepts

Unique properties of hyperthermophilic archaea wikipedia , lookup

Bacteria wikipedia , lookup

Bacterial taxonomy wikipedia , lookup

Biofilm wikipedia , lookup

Human microbiota wikipedia , lookup

Small intestinal bacterial overgrowth wikipedia , lookup

Bacterial cell structure wikipedia , lookup

Bacterial morphological plasticity wikipedia , lookup

Transcript
Tyler Bridges: Earth Sciences
Mentor: David Varricchio -- Earth Sciences
Microtaphonomy of Modern Deer Phalanges
Dissolution of dinosaur bones in EDTA (Ethylenediaminetetraacetic Acid) often reveals forms in the shape of blood
vessels, bone cells and red blood cells. Researchers have interpreted these structures as original dinosaur soft tissue or
alternatively, bacterial biofilms. However, no one has yet observed the taphonomy of soft tissue structures within
vertebrate bones on a microscopic scale. Thus, the internal processes of vessel and cellular decay as well as the growth
of bacteria and their possible role in rapid soft tissue mineralization remain largely unexplored. To better understand
these potential processes, I undertook a series of experiments examining how microtaphonomic processes vary across
differing environments. The decay of modern deer phalanges was observed across a suite of laboratory conditions
modeling aqueous anoxic, aqueous oxic, intensely radiated and frozen environments, each subdivided into three
sediment types - mud, sand and a mud/sand mixture. Phalanges were removed and observed under a Field Electron
Microscope roughly every three months for the duration of a year. Image analysis revealed that under these
experimental conditions, bacterial activity was largely inversely proportional to the preservation of internal soft tissue.
Bones in environments with less bacterial activity had consequently less decay with desiccation being more prevalent,
whereas environments that displayed large groupings of bacteria had little recognizable soft tissue remaining. This
study could be furthered significantly by using mass spectrometry on standard soft tissue found and X-ray
crystallography for any kind of mineralization. These tests would determine if and how bacteria chemically affect
original soft tissue.
146