SSS 2012-05-25
时间:2012-06-28 03:05:57
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(单词翻译)
This is scientific Americans 60 second science, I am Sophie Bushwick. got a minute.
Tens of millions of years ago, cephalopods were hiding from their enemies in clouds of ink. And it turns out that
cuttlefish1 today produce ink that’s almost identical.
Researchers found fossils of two giant cephalopods that swam the seas more than 160 million years ago. Each one contained a preserved ink sac. Analysis of the sacs revealed that some melanin
pigment2—the stuff that makes the ink dark—had survived. Plus, the chemical
makeup3 of the melanin was virtually the same as the pigment found in modern-day cuttlefish ink. The work is in the
Proceedings4 of the National Academy of Sciences.
It’s rare to find preserved soft tissue in the fossil record. In addition, biomolecules often break down, leaving none of the original organic compounds. Melanin, however, has a sturdy structure that resists this fate. And the methods these researchers used to
isolate6 it from the fossils could help other paleontologists better identify preserved organic
molecules5 and their functions.
The finding also demonstrates that when something works, evolution usually leaves it alone. Because if it ain’t broke, don’t fix it.
Thanks for the minute for scientific Americans 60 second science, i am Sophie Bushwick.
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