Got something to say or just want fewer pesky ads? Join us... 😊

Alien worlds could be full of super-intelligent dinosaurs



The Antikythera Mechanism

The oldest known computer
NSC Patron
Aug 7, 2003
8,208
Looks like David Icke could've been right all along

Welcome to our new lizard overlords: Study suggests alien worlds could be full of super-intelligent dinosaurs

Life-forms based on different amino acids could be intelligent dinosaurs
Mammals only triumphed on Earth due to 'accident' of asteroid
'We would be better off not meeting them,' says American scientist

By Rob Waugh

PUBLISHED: 10:42, 12 April 2012 | UPDATED: 00:59, 13 April 2012


Nasa's Kepler telescope scans the skies for 'habitable worlds' - but an American chemist has suggested the whole project might be a terrible idea.

Ronald Breslow suggests that life-forms based on slightly different amino acids and sugars could take the form of huge, ferocious dinosaurs that have evolved to have human-like intelligence and technologies.

'We would be better off not meeting them,' says Breslow, who claims that it was a stroke of luck that an asteroid wiped out dinosaurs on earth, leaving the field clear for mammals such as humans.
A scientist has suggested that other planets could be populated by intelligent dinosaurs

A scientist has suggested that other planets could be populated by intelligent dinosaurs
Amino acid tryptophan: A scientists suggests that a tiny 'tweak' to such acids could mean life on other worlds evolved very differently

Amino acid tryptophan: A scientists suggests that a tiny 'tweak' to such acids could mean life on other worlds evolved very differently


On other worlds, dinosaurs could have evolved into huge, intelligent warriors armed with hi-tech weaponry - but without losing their hunger for fresh meat.

'Of course,' Breslow says, 'Showing that it could have happened this way is not the same as showing that it did. An implication from this work is that elsewhere in the universe there could be life forms based on D-amino acids and L-sugars.

'Such life forms could well be advanced versions of dinosaurs, if mammals did not have the good fortune to have the dinosaurs wiped out by an asteroidal collision, as on Earth.

'We would be better off not meeting them.'

In the report, noted scientist Ronald Breslow, Ph.D., discusses the century-old mystery of why the building blocks of terrestrial amino acids (which make up proteins), sugars, and the genetic materials DNA and RNA exist mainly in one orientation or shape.

There are two possible orientations, left and right, which mirror each other in the same way as hands.

In order for life to arise, proteins, for instance, must contain only one chiral form of amino acids, left or right.
ASteroid

'Such life forms could well be advanced versions of dinosaurs, if mammals did not have the good fortune to have the dinosaurs wiped out by an asteroidal collision, as on Earth,' says Breslow


With the exception of a few bacteria, amino acids in all life on Earth have the left-handed orientation.

Most sugars have a right-handed orientation. How did that so-called homochirality, the predominance of one chiral form, happen?

Breslow describes evidence supporting the idea that the unusual amino acids carried to a lifeless Earth by meteorites about 4 billion years ago set the pattern for normal amino acids with the L-geometry, the kind in terrestial proteins, and how those could lead to D-sugars of the kind in DNA.
 




Triggaaar

Well-known member
Oct 24, 2005
54,087
Goldstone
Nah
 


Brixtaan

New member
Jul 7, 2003
5,030
Border country.East Preston.
Maybe they live there with Hitler. And Lord Lucan.
 


Badger

NOT the Honey Badger
NSC Patron
May 8, 2007
13,311
Toronto
They may be intelligent but they'd still have TINY arms

16454-New-T.rex_.jpg
 


Aadam

Resident Plastic
Feb 6, 2012
1,130
If this were the case then what about crocodiles and alligators? Of all the reptiles today, they're the least changed from their prehistoric ancestors. I don't see them having evolved to have frickin lasers attached to their heads...
 




Diego Napier

Well-known member
Mar 27, 2010
4,416
Ah, that'll be true then

(was it in the Sun?)
 


Aadam

Resident Plastic
Feb 6, 2012
1,130
They may be intelligent but they'd still have TINY arms

16454-New-T.rex_.jpg

Could you imagine. The Tyrannosaurus Rex trying to do everyday tasks...

He couldn't eat using a knife and fork because his arms are too small:

2-300x285.jpg


He can only make scissors, so would always lose rock, paper and scissors:

22-300x227.jpg


He couldn't row a boat...

25-300x168.jpg


Poor guy... No wonder he was so angry...
 








skipper734

Registered ruffian
Aug 9, 2008
9,189
Curdridge
He's been watching to much Ray Harryhausen !
 


Dinosaurs were around for 300 million odd years and achieved nothing other than being "big"

We've only been here about 50,000 years and are so bloody bright we invented football, although a sub-species Invented Palace.

1-0 to the humans.
 




Biscuit

Native Creative
Jul 8, 2003
22,344
Brighton
The statement in the thread title is only correct as far as Aliens on other planets could look/be like f***ing anything.

Total non story.
 




Mellotron

I've asked for soup
Jul 2, 2008
32,648
Brighton
The statement in the thread title is only correct as far as Aliens on other planets could look/be like f***ing anything.

Total non story.

Quite. This whole article could be summed up as follows:

A> What d'ya thinks out there?
B> Who knows...
 




JetsetJimbo

Well-known member
Jun 13, 2011
1,226
I wonder if that planet has its own Ken Livingstone, who is well known for keeping small mammals as pets, something which marks him as odd in Dinoworld. I do hope so.
 




Dr Q

Well-known member
Jul 29, 2004
1,860
Cobbydale
Surely reptiles have one major flaw in that they are cold blooded, and therefore need to lounge around in the sun for a bit, doing fek all.

Then again, maybe they did evolve..... into the Spanish and Greeeks
 


Silent Bob

( ͡° ͜ʖ ͡°)
Dec 6, 2004
22,172
Every story about a study of amino acids can be improved by the inclusion of super intelligent space dinosaurs.
 




Robot Chicken

Seriously?
Jul 5, 2003
13,154
Chicken World
I want to see the space dinosaur version of NSC on their world wide interweb. No one would dare criticise their dinosaur Bozza.
 




Albion and Premier League latest from Sky Sports


Top
Link Here