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Researchers Determine Original Colors of Fossil Specimens

Accepted submission by takyon at 2015-10-01 03:16:12
Science

Virginia Tech and University of Bristol scientists have determined the color of long-dead fossil specimens [theatlantic.com] by analyzing melanosomes [wikipedia.org], organelles that manufacture pigment within a cell:

In recent years, though, science has come closer and closer to figuring out how to discover the colors of long-dead species. In 2008, a team at Yale University identified melanosomes, the organelles that manufacture the pigment melanin within a cell, in a fossilized feather. Because melanosomes differ by shape according to the type of melanin they produce—eumelanin, for example, can be black or brown depending on concentration, while pheomelanin is red—the researchers hypothesized that the appearance of a melanosome could be used to infer the color of the animal it belonged to.

But even better than inferring is knowing for sure. In a study [pnas.org] published today in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, researchers from Virginia Tech and the University of Bristol analyzed the chemical structure of melasonomes from several different fossilized species, confirming the correlation between shape and shade—and, they believe, putting lingering doubts about the method to rest.

"People had questioned whether you could use the shape of the melanosome to tell anything about the color, because it's been through a lot. Millions of years in the ground is obviously going to take a toll," said Caitlin Colleary, a Ph.D. candidate in geological sciences at Virginia Tech University and the study's lead author. "So by finding traces of the chemical melanin in association with these structures, we've basically confirmed that you can use the shapes of the melanosomes themselves to tell what color something was."

Chemical, experimental, and morphological evidence for diagenetically altered melanin in exceptionally preserved fossils [pnas.org] [abstract]


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