Breakthrough Gives 3-D Vision of Dawn of Life 54
butterwise writes "MSNBC reports that a new scanning technique could revolutionize paleontology. The new technique is allowing researchers a virtual dissection of half-billion-year-old fossilized embryos." From the article: "The Chinese, Swedish, Swiss and British researchers on Donoghue's team used a 1,640-foot-wide (500-meter-wide) particle accelerator in Switzerland to scan the minute fossils, and then fed the information into a computer that generated complete 3-D images of the internal structures in fine detail."
Spiffy, but... (Score:1)
Spiffy, but how they going to get one of these things out into the field?
I suppose they must really want to, or the owners of this particle accelerator are very cool with, see what's inside
there's a little sticker on this one, it says Ant-Hill Inside
Re:Spiffy, but... (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Spiffy, but... (Score:5, Informative)
The 3D reconstruction of fossils isn't new. That's been done for, oh, probably close to 100 years. In the early 20th century, it was done by grinding down a fossil specimen millimetre by millimetre, sketching or photographing each surface, and then putting together a wax or paper model of each section until the 3D shape is reconstructed. It's been done for everything from fossil plants to fish and other vertebrates. Very laborious work.
More recently, people do the same thing, but take a digital picture of the sections and use software to assemble a 3D volume and select and render parts of it. If the object is relatively large (say, centimetres in size and larger), it can alternatively be subjected to medical CAT and other types of non-destructive 3D imaging techniques. This is routine for specimens such as dinosaur skulls, in order to see the interior without destroying the specimen. If the fossil is small and transparent, 3D imaging can be done with laser scanning confocal microscopy [wikipedia.org]. But opaque, small (say, require the destructive serial sectioning method, meaning you have a nice, scientifically valuable 3D reconstruction [ox.ac.uk] at the end of the procedure, but no specimen anymore.
The new part in this technique is therefore the *non-destructive* 3D reconstruction of such tiny fossil specimens. That's where the particle accelerator becomes necessary to get sufficient resolution to be useful. This is much higher resolution than typical 3D medical imaging. The general technique isn't that unusual, because it has existed for years too. It is the application to microfossils [nature.com] that is relatively new (Nature registration required to view that last article).
Oh, and if people are wondering what "penis worms" are (the jokes are piling up by now), the technical term is Priapulida [wikipedia.org]. More details at the linked page.
Yeah, I know. I'm spoiling the fun.
Did anyone else doublecheck the URL (Score:5, Funny)
That'll teach me to RTFA.
Re:Did anyone else doublecheck the URL (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Did anyone else doublecheck the URL (Score:1)
Re:Did anyone else doublecheck the URL (Score:5, Informative)
ancalagon [oedilf.com] by mike scholtes [oedilf.com]
In the lagan from Cambrian seas,
There's a dragon that's catching some z's.
Though ancalagon's gone,
Its priapulid spawn
Are still dodging extinction with ease.
(an-KAL-a-gon) A Cambrian priapulid (penis worm) found preserved in the Burgess Shale, ancalagon was apparently named after a dragon (Great Worm) in Tolkien's Lord of the Rings. Priapulids burrow tail-first into the sea floor with their mouth-parts exposed. A priapulid feeds by everting its gut, fastening onto soft-bodied prey, and then pulling gut and prey back down into its buried body. Lagan (sometimes spelled ligen or lagend) is a term from salvage law referring to goods that have sunk to the sea floor but are marked for recovery. Here it is metaphorically applied to fossils.
Re:Did anyone else doublecheck the URL (Score:1, Offtopic)
~I am the King of the Echo People!~
~It's a hair supplement.~
~He was a good cat!~
My cat can eat a WHOLE watermelon (Score:1)
Re:Did anyone else doublecheck the URL (Score:5, Funny)
"The results are truly orgasmic," Donoghue said.
What do you know, I get the same results from my penis worm.
Here's a phrase you'll never again see on MSNBC. (Score:5, Funny)
"The results are truly orgasmic," Donoghue said.
The whole embryo thing makes that funny on so many levels.
Re:Here's a phrase you'll never again see on MSNBC (Score:1)
The whole embryo thing makes that funny on so many levels.
Not to mention that the caption for the first image mentions a "penis worm".
Re:Here's a phrase you'll never again see on MSNBC (Score:1)
"The results are truly organic"
I'll be damned if Donoghue didn't just have an orgasam though.
Re:Here's a phrase you'll never again see on MSNBC (Score:2)
I hope he gives a press conference with a bunch of adopted embryo velociraptors on stage behind him. After all it's not like they wouldn't have time to re-evolve before his next press conference.
Re:Here's a phrase you'll never again see on MSNBC (Score:2)
You are absolutely right. I had my doubts, but then I read the article.
what? (Score:3, Funny)
Markuelia? I call mine Ivan the Terrible.
Did they say "Penis"? (Score:3, Funny)
Sorry, but I'm too immature for this science thing.
Tee hee.
They combine the following into one article... (Score:4, Funny)
"ancient relative of the penis worm"
"The results are truly orgasmic," Donoghue said.
I am definitely not old enough to read this. In fact, I don't think I ever will be. Penis worm, and Orgasmic. They should never be together.
Re:They combine the following into one article... (Score:2)
Aw, come on
Re:They combine the following into one article... (Score:1)
Oh yes, they should be together. They should be together every day.
Well, how long will we need it? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Well, how long will we need it? (Score:1)
Penis? Teeth? (Score:2)
Yes, because modern penises have teeth? Sorry, this whole "synchroton-radiation X-ray tomographic microscopy" thing is way too complex for my humble brain to understand...
Nanotechnology the next step? (Score:2)
I also imagine nanites being less destructive, what with being able to slip in between even molecules without having to "measure with microscope, mark with sharpie, cut with ace" (relatively speaking).
Re:Nanotechnology the next step? (Score:3, Informative)
Well, what an imagination you have! What are *your* nanites built out of that they can slip between molecules without disturbing them...? (Hint: The next thing smaller than a molecule is an atom. Single atoms aren't nanites, and when you stick several together you have a molecule...)
Re:Nanotechnology the next step? (Score:2)
so let me get this straight (Score:3, Funny)
3D dawn of life. (Score:2)
Non-damaging? (Score:3, Interesting)
Even if it does do damage, its no doubt less than caused by dissolving off the rock, and then looking at the fossil. I am just curious as to whether it is really totally non-invasive.
Re:Non-damaging? (Score:2)
Anyway, I think it would be quite harmless for fossilized structures, as those minerals are simply quite stable. Even the odd ionization is most likely to just revert after a while. If we would ever want to survey what miniscule remains there might be of actual organic material, then that's a completely different thing. For most fossils, that's completely out of the question anyway.
Re:Non-damaging? (Score:3, Interesting)
I like fossils as much as the next guy.... (Score:1, Funny)
Re:I like fossils as much as the next guy.... (Score:2)
Then clearly you aren't doing it right.
I thought life was 3 billion years old (Score:2)
and as an added bonus... (Score:2, Funny)
Movies (Score:2)
Re:Movies (Score:2)
Know your Greeks (Score:2)
Who said scientists have no sense of humor?
I like this scanning technique, (Score:1, Troll)
As Long as they don't use the Stem Cells (Score:1, Troll)
Else W will come down like thunder.
Eureka! (Score:1)
Scientist 1: how are we going to research those rare half-billion-year-old fossil embryos?
Scientist 2: My precioussss.....
Scientist 3: Well, I've got enough frequent flyer miles to get a free blast at some huge 500 meter-wide particle accelerator in Switzerland...
Scientist 4: I'm feeling bored.. but hey! Hmm..
Ok, ok. I realise that this idea is pretty strange. In reality I can only applaud these wonderfu
From the article: (Score:1)