Blogs

  • News
  • |
  • Art
  • |
  • History
  • |
  • Food and Travel
  • |
  • Science
Dinosaur Tracking

Where paleontology meets pop culture

Hominid Hunting

Meet the members of the tangled human family tree

Innovations

How human ingenuity is changing the way we live

Surprising Science

Ideas, news and discoveries from the world of science


April 11, 2012

Dinosaurs From Space!

Somewhere, out in the interstellar void, there may be a planet inhabited by hyper-advanced dinosaurs. At least, that’s what a new paper by Columbia University chemist Ronald Breslow says.

This morning, friend and fellow science writer David Dobbs forwarded me an American Chemical Society press release titled “Could ‘advanced’ dinosaurs rule other planets?” Since I was still a little bleary-eyed at the early hour, I thought I had read that wrong. But I saw it right the first time. “New scientific research raises the possibility that advanced versions of T. rex and other dinosaurs—monstrous creatures with the intelligence and cunning of humans—may be the life forms that evolved on other planets in the universe,” the item explained.

I couldn’t help but wonder if the pronouncement was inspired Planet of Dinosaursthe awful 1978 film about a futuristic space crew stranded on a planet stuck in the dinosaurian heyday of the Mesozoic. But the paper itself suggests a different origin for what is ultimately a fossil-based non sequitur.

Breslow’s paper is primarily concerned with why the biochemical signature of life on earth is so consistent. Molecules such as amino acids, sugars, DNA and RNA exist in one of two possible orientations, left-handed or right-handed. Instead of showing a mixture of both forms, biomolecules typically come in only one form: Most sugars have a right-handed orientation, while most amino acids exhibit a left-handed orientation. Why life on earth should exhibit these particular arrangements and not the other possible orientations is a mystery that goes back to the origin of life itself.

One idea, favored by Breslow, is that meteorites carried specific types of amino acids and other organic flotsam to earth around 4 billion years ago. This is an extension of the idea that life here was “seeded” by comets, asteroids or meteorites. The origin and subsequent evolution of our planet’s flora and fauna would be constrained by the characteristics of the biomolecules that gave life a jump-start.

None of this has anything to do with dinosaurs. (The first dinosaurs, as far as we know, originated a scant 230 million years ago.) Yet, in closing, Breslow briefly speculates on what alien creatures might look like—perhaps possessing the opposite biochemical orientations of life on earth. “Such life forms could well be advanced versions of dinosaurs,” Breslow writes, “if mammals did not have the good fortune to have the dinosaurs wiped out by an asteroidal collision.” Whatever such space dinosaurs might look like, though, “We would be better off not meeting them,” Breslow warns.

As much as I’m charmed by the idea of alien dinosaurs, Breslow’s conjecture makes my brain ache. Our planet’s fossil record has intricately detailed the fact that evolution is not a linear march of progress from one predestined waypoint to another. Dinosaurs were never destined to be. The history of life on earth has been greatly influenced by chance and contingency, and dinosaurs are a perfect example of this fact.

Prior to 250 million years ago, the synapsids—our ancestors and relatives—were the dominant creatures on land. But the apocalyptic extinction at the end of the Permian Period eliminated most synapsid lineages, in addition to many other forms of life. This clearing of the ecological slate is what allowed a different group of creatures to proliferate. Early archosaurs, or “ruling reptiles,” included the archaic forerunners of crocodiles, pterosaurs and dinosaurs, in addition to various groups now extinct, and these creatures dominated the Triassic.

Despite what has been traditionally told, though, the dinosaurian branch of the greater archosaur family tree didn’t immediately out-compete its neighbors. Eoraptor and Herrerasaurus were not the Triassic terrors they were cast as during the mid-1990s. For the most part, Triassic dinosaurs were small, rare, marginal parts of the ecosystems they inhabited. It was only after another mass extinction at the end of the Triassic, around 200 million years ago, that the competitors of early dinosaurs were removed and the reign of the dinosaurs truly began. “[T]here was nothing predestined or superior about dinosaurs when they first arose,” paleontologist Stephen Brusatte and colleagues wrote in a massive review of dinosaur origins, “and without the contingency of various earth-history events during the early Mesozoic, the Age of Dinosaurs might have never happened.”

Even if we ignore all the major evolutionary events prior to 250 million years ago, the fossil record demonstrates that the origin and rise of the dinosaurs were heavily influenced by two catastrophic extinction events. Had the Permian or Triassic extinctions not happened, there is no indication that dinosaurs would have evolved or come to rule the world—unforeseen events drastically shaped evolutionary history. Why on earth would we expect such patterns to be played out in just the right sequence on another planet? To say that there are dinosaurs on alien worlds presupposes that there is an irresistible direction that all life follows, and that dinosaurs are an inevitable actors in the drawn-out drama. There is no evidence that this is so.

The strange thing is that Breslow acknowledges the role of mass extinctions in evolutionary history. His speculative space dinosaurs are supposedly “advanced” creatures which were spared from oblivion. Other writers have toyed with this concept before, the most famous example being Dougal Dixon’s The New Dinosaurs. Sadly, though, Breslow did not include any illustrations or offer specific details about the sort of uber-dinosaurs he has in mind.

Yet, what we know of the history of life on earth dispenses with the need to imagine such fantastic, alien creatures. Dinosaurs still exist—birds are a surviving dinosaur lineage that has exploded into a beautifully array of disparate forms. And some birds, such as ravens, are quite intelligent, so we don’t have to wonder about what an especially smart dinosaur would have looked like. The reign of the dinosaurs may have ended 66 million years ago, but their 230-million-year-old legacy continues to this day. A simple shift in our understanding of dinosaur evolution has rescued the beloved creatures from extinction. I deeply doubt that there are dinosaurs in space, but I am glad that at least one variety of feathered dinosaur remains with us here.

References:

Breslow, R. (2012). Evidence for the Likely Origin of Homochirality in Amino Acids, Sugars, and Nucleosides on Prebiotic Earth Journal of the American Chemical Society DOI: 10.1021/ja3012897

Brusatte, S., Nesbitt, S., Irmis, R., Butler, R., Benton, M., & Norell, M. (2010). The origin and early radiation of dinosaurs Earth-Science Reviews, 101 (1-2), 68-100 DOI: 10.1016/j.earscirev.2010.04.001



***

Sign up for our free email newsletter and receive the best stories from Smithsonian.com each week.

13 Comments »

  1. Josh says:

    I think a point is being missed here. We very well might have evolved to be dominate even without extinction events, I think the paper is just trying to point out the fact that the dinosaurs COULD have evolved to mirror our intelligence given the time.

  2. BJ Nicholls says:

    I suppose that an infinite or many-worlds universe would have to include parallel Earths that followed every possible permutation of events. But that’s pretty much a cosmological mental exercise rather than a compelling reason to erect defenses against “dinosaur” invaders. Simon Conway Morris maintains that the path to life evolving intelligence is inevitable. That’s really hard to test since we have but one evolutionary history to study.

    Besides, we all know that it’s cephalopod invaders that will rule us with cold, tentacled, superiority.

  3. Zhen says:

    Boy, a lot of late April Fools jokes this year.

  4. Robert Hodge says:

    This sounds like the idea for who knows how many sci-fi movies. By the way, I LIKED “Planet of Dinosaurs”, even though it was a Grade-Z movie. I’ve seen some big budget movies that were WAY worse!

  5. Tom Hopp says:

    There have been quite a few fiction writers who beat Breslow to the idea of space dinosaurs. In fact, the very notion of intelligent bird-reptile invaders has evolved along with the evolution of our view of dinosaurs, as I wrote on my blog, coincidentally, just a few days ago. It’s quite a leap, though, from the right- or left-handedness of amino acids to the notion of an intelligent dino. On the other hand, for the sake of amusing speculations, why not?

  6. Schenck says:

    Why is it always non-paleontologists making wacky forays into dinosaurland? But you never heard about classically trained systematic paleontologists publishing papers on quantum dynamics or organometallic chemistry.

    Anyway, the idea of “space dinosaurs” comes from the concept of ‘grades’ of organisms, you have fish grade, reptile grade, and mammal grade. “Dinosaurs” just got caught up with the ‘reptile grade’. In order to really see why the contingency and non-inevitability of evolution wouldn’t produce something like dinosaurs on another planet, just consider how ridiculous a statement such as ‘feathered birds are an unavoidable lifeform’ would be. Recognizing dinosaurs as more birdlike than ‘reptile’ like makes it easier to see how lucky we were that they evolved here at all!

  7. I feel a bit sorry for Breslow – what he probably saw as a throwaway line to finish off the paper and maybe make people stop and think for a moment was turned into the central theme of the press release by a press-officer.
    Still, it has got him far more publicity than he could possibly have otherwise… actually, now I don’t feel sorry for him at all and I want to hire his press officer!

  8. surferdave says:

    Sounds like the Super Mario Brothers movie to me. Dennis Hopper made a great alien dino villian.

  9. J. Blankenship says:

    Who’s to say that there’s not a race of lizard men living on a distant planet, with an intelligence equal to or greater than that of humans. The galaxy is a huge place with billions of possibilities in which we as humans can’t really even begin to fathom. Who’s also to say that if mass extinction had never occurred to the dinosaurs on Earth what they could have eventually evolved into.

  10. A recent novel “Nodal Convergence” was published just on this topic. It adressed not parallel evolution or aliens but rather a plausible scenario where dinosaurs are discovered to be more intelligent than we thought and how others may have assisted them to help colonize other stars. More than fantasy, the novel references current published papers and work to support the means, rational and potential for late crataceous dinosaurs colonizing other stars.

    “Nodal Convergence” can be found on Amazon or at:
    http://gravidynamics.net/Books.htm

  11. Harold says:

    Science fiction writer Larry Niven had a proposal for the original “V” miniseries that would reveal that the reptilian invaders were actually highly evolved descendants of dinosaurs abducted by aliens, and were basically coming home. This would also explain why they could breathe our atmosphere and eat our…err, US, without having the sorts of compatibility problems aliens should have.

  12. They are already right here on Earth. I named them Repto Sapiens as they have evolved quite a lot from their dinosaur roots. They have been interacting with humanity for millenia. It’s called the FOOD CHAIN. IF THEY WIPED US OUT THEY WOULD GO HUNGRY. Follow the meat.

    There is no need for an invasion. Our Repto Sapien cousins already own the Earth and us. Why would a cattle rancher invade his own ranch when he already owns it and all the sheeple. According to the oral history of 66 native American tribes, their peoples have been taken to 5 other ranch planets by the “ant people” and “lizard men,” (Gray and Reptilian beings). The Native Americans do not speak with “forked tongue.” That expression came about because the American Indians know they were lied to by the creatures with those forked tongues.

    UFOs are not all flown by true extraterrestrials, the majority of them are owned and operated by our advanced Repto Sapien cousins, who share the Earth with us as their ancestral home world. They are historically cited in about 80 places in the Bible, being described as a SERPENT THAT WALKS UPRIGHT ON TWO LEGS AND IS AS TALL AS A CAMEL (8 FEET TALL). There are statues and temple paintings of them in nearly every ancient society. This has nothing to do with “religious beliefs.” It is a proven historical and archaeological fact. That’s why I wrote a book showing all of the real world evidence.

    Publisher’s site to order my book in paperback or Ebook

    http://booklocker.com/books/1417.html

    WARNING reveals a frightening alien agenda, a long-term program of social domination and periodic controlled genocide. Mankind is now in great danger. We have a terrible problem to overcome. Resolution requires international solidarity, then forcible negotiation with the aliens.

    Some artwork from my book. Click on each image for larger view:

    http://picasaweb.google.com/antigray45/Artwork02

    If you have any questions, please ask.

    Art Greenfield

  13. I think the more relevant question is whether alien civilizations will consist of organisms much bigger or smaller than us. Much bigger ones would need a lot more food per capita, so it would be hard to form large, complex societies. Much smaller ones might not have enough surplus brain matter do a lot of thinking even the ratio of brain to body mass is high.

    But concluding that we’re just the right size seems rather anthropomorphic.

RSS feed for comments on this post. TrackBack URI

Leave a comment

Comments are moderated, and will not appear until Smithsonian.com has approved them. Smithsonian reserves the right not to post any comments that are unlawful, threatening, offensive, defamatory, invasive of a person's privacy, inappropriate, confidential or proprietary, political messages, product endorsements, or other content that might otherwise violate any laws or policies.

Spam protection by WP Captcha-Free

Advertisement



Follow Us

Travel with Smithsonian






Advertisement