clipped from: www.newscientist.com   
dinosaur bone buried for 80 million years has yielded a mix of proteins and microstructures resembling cells

Proteins such as collagen are far more durable than DNA, but they had not been expected to last the 65 million years

Multiple hadrosaur red blood "cells" surrounded by white, fibrous matrix (Image: Mary H. Schweitzer)

Schweitzer took a look at the pristine leg bone of a plant-eating hadrosaur that had been encased in sandstone for 80 million years. She and colleagues exhaustively tested the sample, sequencing the proteins they found with a new and better mass spectrometer and sending samples to two other labs for verification.

recovering not just collagen – which conveys little evolutionary information because it is the same in almost all animals – but also haemoglobin, elastin and laminin, as well as cell-like structures resembling blood and bone cells. The proteins should reveal more about dinosaur evolution because they vary much more between species.

Journal reference: Science (DOI: 10.1126/science.1165069)