“The end result was a total of eight collagen peptides and 149 amino acids from four different samples, sequences that held up when multiple validation steps were performed, including comparisons with synthetic peptides using a spectral comparison algorithm and statistical evaluation.”
I imagine that the irony of you posting this excellent piece of scientific endeavor by the very people who are fully paid up members of the “anti-science Temple of Darwin religion” isn´t registering with right now, yeah?
I think they deserve a pat of the back for such great work. Finding intact peptides and amino acids of such age is amazing. Just imagine what knowledge we can unveil in the future. It´s truly exciting.
What it ain´t is soft musculatur or blood vessels. Keep digging....or should I say keep lying for God.
Wrong again, Natufian. Do you never tire of making yourself look silly? All it takes is a brief search on your part to avoid such embarrassment:
"Schweitzer then duplicated her findings with at least three other well-preserved dinosaur specimens, one 80-million-year-old hadrosaur and two 65-million-year-old tyrannosaurs. All of these specimens preserved vessels, cell-like structures, or flexible matrix that resembled bone collagen from modern specimens."
As for the muscles, see the "organically preserved muscle tissue" in the supposedly 18 mya salamander find mentioned in the OP. And if you object because the scientists refer to the salamander as a fossil, keep in mind that the scientists who found the soft tissue, proteins and blood vessels in the T. rex and Hydrosaur referred to them as fossils as well.