BREAKING: Scientist just got FIRED for peer-reviewed paper on Dinosaur Bone Tissue

BREAKING: Scientist just got FIRED for peer-reviewed paper on Dinosaur Bone Tissue

Mark Armitage, a scientist who only weeks ago published a peer-reviewed secular journal article on the discovery of sheets of soft bone tissue (osteocyte cells) of a Triceratops dinosaur fossil, was just fired from California State University.

For anyone not familiar with this issue, within the past several years, there have been numerous discoveries of soft tissues/proteins, and DNA discovered in dinosaur fossils that are supposed to be 65+ million years old.

These discoveries are strong evidence that the dinosaur fossils are not nearly that old, challenging the entire paradigm of Evolution.

In other words, Armitage has been fired for presenting scientific data that contradicts Evolution.

Evolution is a Religion, not a scientific theory.

Link to Armitage’s peer-reviewed paper:

http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0065128113000020 

Soft sheets of fibrillar bone from a fossil of the supraorbital horn of the dinosaur Triceratops horridus
JULY 2013

Mark Hollis Armitage
Kevin Lee Anderson

Department of Biology, California State University
Department of Biology, Arkansas State University

Abstract

Soft fibrillar bone tissues were obtained from a supraorbital horn of Triceratops horridus collected at the Hell Creek Formation in Montana, USA. Soft material was present in pre and post-decalcified bone. Horn material yielded numerous small sheets of lamellar bone matrix. This matrix possessed visible microstructures consistent with lamellar bone osteocytes. Some sheets of soft tissue had multiple layers of intact tissues with osteocyte-like structures featuring filipodial-like interconnections and secondary branching. Both oblate and stellate types of osteocyte-like cells were present in sheets of soft tissues and exhibited organelle-like microstructures. SEM analysis yielded osteocyte-like cells featuring filipodial extensions of 18–20 μm in length. Filipodial extensions were delicate and showed no evidence of any permineralization or crystallization artifact and therefore were interpreted to be soft. This is the first report of sheets of soft tissues from Triceratops horn bearing layers of osteocytes, and extends the range and type of dinosaur specimens known to contain non-fossilized material in bone matrix.

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more information on other organic material found in dinosaur fossils:

http://kgov.com/dinosaur-soft-tissue

Anonymous