Follow this LINK and you can even download the lecture...if you need to frighten any local wildlife!
Browse these pages to learn more about the work that Prof. Phil Manning and his colleagues undertake at the University of Manchester. This blog is written and updated by Phil. The images on this blog can be used by educators for talks, classroom and new media projects.
Thursday, 28 March 2013
Bright Lights and Dinosaurs Lecture...
Last week was National Science and Engineering week in the UK. The University of Manchester hosted many events for local schools and colleges, including workshops and lectures. The Palaeontology Research group took part in the science fair, but yours truly also gave a lecture. The University just posted the lecture on the web, but I thought I might give you some insight to our wonderful world of synchrotrons, fossils and pigments!
Tuesday, 12 March 2013
VI International Symposium on Dinosaur Palaeontology
Occasionally an awesome dinosaur meeting appears on the horizon that you HAVE to attend. The VI International Symposium on Dinosaur Paleontology and their Environment is one such meeting. This event will run from 5 to 7 September in 2013 in Salas de los Infantes (Burgos-Spain).
More information on the meeting can be found at this LINK.
The first circular with information on this meeting can be found at this LINK.
Primera circular de las VI Jornadas Internacionales sobre Paleontología de Dinosaurios y su Entorno. 5-7 septiembre 2013, Salas de los Infantes.
El Colectivo Arqueológico y Paleontológico Salense (C.A.S.) y el Museo de Dinosaurios de Salas de los Infantes anuncian la próxima celebración de las VI Jornadas Internacionales sobre Paleontología de Dinosaurios y su Entorno, que se celebrarán en Salas de los Infantes (Burgos) del 5 al 7 de septiembre de 2013 con la colaboración de la Universidad de Zaragoza, la Universidad del País Vasco y la Universidad de Salamanca.
PREINSCRIPCIÓN
Las preinscripciones se harán desde: http://vijornadassalas.blogspot.com.es/ ; el plazo final para las inscripciones con descuento es el 31 de julio de 2013. Las tarifas serán:
Antes del 31 de julio de 2013: - Normal: 70 ?. - Estudiantes/doctorado: 35 ? Con posterioridad al 31 de julio de 2013: - Normal: 80 ? - Estudiantes/doctorado: 45 ?
INFORMACIÓN
Para cualquier información sobre las VI Jornadas visitar la siguiente página o contactar con la organización en las siguientes direcciones electrónicas. http://vijornadassalas.blogspot.com.es/ Email:caspaleontologia@gmail.comEnvío de resúmenes:http://vijornadassalas.blogspot.com.es/ Dirección postal: Colectivo Arqueológico-Paleontológico de Salas; Plaza Jesús Aparicio, 9. 09600 Salas de los Infantes (Burgos, España). Tfno. contacto: Museo de Dinosaurios de Salas de los Infantes (0034) 947 39 70 01 Segunda circular: abril de 2013 Tercera circular: julio de 2013
Friday, 8 March 2013
Twinkle, Twinkle little Star...
Today started early with a long drive from Manchester to Harwell in Oxfordshire. Many of you who have read my earlier blog postings, will know this is where the Diamond Synchrotron Lightsource lives. It is here that my colleagues and I often come to bathe fossil samples in the super-bright light that this facility produces.
However, today is a little different. I am here to give two public lectures on our work on using synchrotron light. My aim is to demonstrate how such bright light sources can probe the delicate trace of the atomic heart that beats invisibly within the very building blocks of fossils....and the echo the chemistry of the ast life that they represent. This kind of work can only be achieved by using such powerful x-ray sources.
Having given one lecture, I am sat quietly working inside the foyer of the vast research complex...catching-up on my blog. The weather outside stinks...grey, cold, windy and raining...as dusk falls, there is not a single star in the sky... it is tough separating sky from the mist swirling around the facility. But who needs stars, when you have a synchrotron lightsource that can shine a million times brighter than mere celestial bodies. This is not so much 'Like a Diamond in the Sky'...but more like one brighter than a million stars, just outside Didcot in Oxfordshire, England.
However, today is a little different. I am here to give two public lectures on our work on using synchrotron light. My aim is to demonstrate how such bright light sources can probe the delicate trace of the atomic heart that beats invisibly within the very building blocks of fossils....and the echo the chemistry of the ast life that they represent. This kind of work can only be achieved by using such powerful x-ray sources.
Having given one lecture, I am sat quietly working inside the foyer of the vast research complex...catching-up on my blog. The weather outside stinks...grey, cold, windy and raining...as dusk falls, there is not a single star in the sky... it is tough separating sky from the mist swirling around the facility. But who needs stars, when you have a synchrotron lightsource that can shine a million times brighter than mere celestial bodies. This is not so much 'Like a Diamond in the Sky'...but more like one brighter than a million stars, just outside Didcot in Oxfordshire, England.
'Twinkle Twinkle little star
How I wonder what you are
Up above the world so high
Like a 'synchrotron' in the sky...'
...only not as bright!'
...only not as bright!'
Tuesday, 5 March 2013
Camels on ice...
Every now and then an extinct species is discovered in the last place on Earth that you might expect to look. Today, is no exception with the discovery of a 3.5 million year old camel in the High Arctic. A Canadian research team, helped by scientists at The
University of Manchester, has discovered the first evidence of an extinct giant
camel in what is now a very inhospitable place (especially for camels!). The fossil was
identified from the remarkable preservation of the protein collagen (that all so important flexible component in every bone of your body) from bone fragments unearthed on
Ellsmere Island. The unique nature of the collegen allowed the researchers to identify it was a camel...as without this protein 'fingerprint', it was merely shattered bone and of little value. These now valuable bone fragments mark the furthest North that a camel has ever been found.
The fossils were collected over three summers in 2006, 2008
and 2010 by Dr. Natalia Rybczynski, a vertebrate paleontologist with the
Canadian Museum of Nature. Some important morphological features suggested to the team that the fossil fragments were part of a large tibia (main lower-leg bone in
vertebrates with legs!). Digital files of each of the fossil bone fragments were produced using a
3D laser scanner, allowing for the jigsaw of bone pieces to be assembled and aligned.
However, even when the bone was reassembled it was still unclear as to which species the bone came
from. So the researchers enlisted the help of Dr. Mike Buckley from the
Manchester Institute of Biotechnology. He used the pioneering new technique
called “collagen fingerprinting” to identify the animal from the type of collegen protein (below) recovered from the bone
fragments.
Mike did this by extracting minute amounts the 'fossil' collagen, searching for chemical markers for
the building blocks of the collegen protein (peptides). Mike was able to generate a identifiable collagen 'fingerprint' (profile) for the fossil bone, indicating he had bagged a camel! What is quite fascinating, is that the fossil species collegen 'fingerprint' was almost identical to the modern day Dromedary camal. This giant camel was roughly
30% larger than living camel species...which is pretty big. Next time your stood next to a camel...try adding 30% to its size!
Slightly warmer camel! |
Dr. Rybczynski was keen to point out that, “These
bones represent the first evidence of camels living in the High Arctic region. It
extends the previous range of camels in North America northward by about 1,200
km, and suggests that the lineage that gave rise to modern camels may have been
originally adapted to living in an Arctic forest environment.”
Dr. Buckley added, “This is the first time that collagen has
been extracted and used to identify a species from such ancient bone fragments.
The fact the protein was able to survive for three and a half million years is
due to the frozen nature of the Arctic. This has been an exciting project to
work on and unlocks the huge potential collagen fingerprinting has to better
identify extinct species from our preciously finite supply of fossil material.”
Dr. Roy Wogelius from The University of Manchester’s School
of Earth, Atmospheric & Environmental Sciences analysed the mineral content
from the fossil bones. His findings suggest that the processes of mineralization worked along with cold
temperatures to help preserve the all-important protein-package in the bones. “This specimen is
spectacular, and provides important clues about how such exceptional
preservation may occur” said Dr. Wogelius.
Other fossil finds at the same site as the giant camel suggest the High Arctic camel was living
in a forest environment dominated by pines, spruce and larches, this during a warm phase in the
planet planets long history of life. It was this warm-phase to the climate and favourable environment that encourage the camels to migrate so far north from their current range.
The identification of the High Arctic camel is described in
the March 5 edition of the online journal Nature Communications.
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