Dinosaur Collagen Does Exist

When soft tissues in dinosaurs were found, Darwin's disciples denied it. Accusations of faulty laboratory procedures, sample contamination, and other excuses were made. Even so, discoveries of soft tissues and saying those things should not exist continued.

Things kept getting worse for evolutionists. Cellular proteins were found in dinosaur fossils, and so has DNA. Not only is the word fossil used loosely because not all fossils are permineralized, a new study definitively confirmed that dinosaur collagen exists in fossils.


Modified postage stamp of an Edmontosaurus head from the author's collection
The hip bone of an Edmontosaurus was studied with several techniques and identified the remnants of collagen. Molecules had degraded, but they were clearly identified as collagen. When compared to protein sequences of other animals, those of dinosaurs were unique.


It is commendable that the researchers admitted to the evidence, which is a huge problem for evolution and deep time. However, they apparently avoided discussing that last part — and are unlikely to admit that the evidence points to recent creation.
A team of scientists from the University of Liverpool and UCLA have reported finding incontrovertible soft tissue in a dinosaur bone. They found collagen fragments in the sacrum bone of an exceptionally-preserved Edmontosaurus from the Hell Creek formation in South Dakota. A mass spectroscopist said, “This research shows beyond doubt that organic biomolecules, such as proteins like collagen, appear to be present in some fossils.Edmontosaurus was a duck-billed dinosaur that grew up to 50 feet long and weighed 9 tons.

Read more about this really big news at "Dinosaur Original Collagen Confirmed."