Dinosaurs
could potentially walk among us in real life soon as the paleontologist who
inspired the original Jurassic Park movie has announced a research project to
bring the extinct creatures back to life. Dr. Jack Horner says scientists are
only 5 to 10 years away from genetically engineering dinosaurs into existence.
According to
a report by PEOPLE, Horner is working with scientists at Harvard and Yale,
looking to the closest living relatives of dinosaurs in the hopes of
reverse-engineering them. “Of course, birds are dinosaurs," Horner said.
"So we just need to fix them so they look a little more like a
dinosaur."
Horner and
his team will reportedly begin with the modern day chicken, which is widely
considered a direct descendant of the massive beasts that once dominated the
earth. Horner has consulted on all four Jurassic Park films. In a behind the
scenes interview from the first movie in the franchise, writer Michael Crichton
confessed that the hero, Dr. Alan Grant, was an amalgam of Horner and Philip J.
Currie.
The
71-year-old paleontologist said that when he first began work on the movies, he
believe dinosaurs would be revived in the same way they are in the film --
through preserved bits of their DNA taken from fossils.
However, in
the years since, he and his colleagues have come to better understand how DNA
degrades over time, and determined that this is not the course they will have
to take.
As Horner
sees it, the chicken, and many other modern birds, have the genetic code of
their dinosaur ancestors stored within their own DNA. He believes they will be
able to manipulate that code to reverse the evolutionary process -- forcing
mutations that will express more and more of those ancient characteristics.
“Dinosaurs
had long tails, arms, and hands – and through evolution they’ve lost their
tails, and their arms and hands have turned into wings," Horner explained
to reporters. "Additionally, their whole snout has changed from the
velociraptor-look to the bird-like beak morphology.” Horner said he hopes his
work will determine a way to flip a switch “in such a way that we’ll get these
ancestral characteristics back.”
Horner cited
a 2015 study as his "proof of concept," noting that scientists at
Harvard and Yale were able to trick a bird's head into changing into a dinosaur
snout.
“Basically
what we do is we go into an embryo that’s just beginning to form, and use some
genetic markers to sort of identify when certain genes turn on and when they
turn off,” he said.. “And by determining when certain genes turn on, we can
sort of figure out how a tail begins to develop. And we want to fix that gene
so it doesn t stop the tail from growing.”
Horner was
completely confident that some form of what he called a
"chickensoraus" will be walking the earth within ten years. “We can
make a bird with teeth, and we can change its mouth,” he said. “And actually
the wings and hands are not as difficult. We’re pretty sure we can do that
soon.”
The project
is no simple task, however, and Horner noted that “the tail is the biggest
project. But on the other hand, we have been able to do some things recently
that have given us hope that it won’t take too long.”
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