📄 Extracted Text (697 words)
From: Jack Homer •t: >
To: Jeffrey Epstein <[email protected]>
Subject: Re:
Date: Mon, 12 Nov 2012 23:19:39 +0000
Hi Jeffrey, I apologize for not getting back to you earlier with more information about our dinochicken summit,
as I left immediately on a couple lecture trips, one of which was to Madrid, from which I returned home early
this morning. In Madrid I did a TED like talk and then my wife Vanessa and I did a couple of joint lectures on
the Dinochicken Project to the National Museum (of natural History) developmental biology folks and a high
school genetics class, both in Madrid. It was fun!
The summit was very interesting, and certainly helped the different groups get a handle on what each group is up
too. Of course, only two of our groups are actually working on the project, as the Georgia group is simply
proposing to help out. The first talk was by Hans Larsson and he discussed the different processes he and his
post docs had attempted, one of which was very interesting. They had stuck a tiny tube around the developing
tail of an early embryo to confine the the area in which the vertebral somites form with the hope that the tubing
would direct cell growth in a long linear direction rather than expanding laterally. Their hope was that extra
somites might form. Interestingly it appears from their initial experiments that that happened, but now they have
to determine if extra somites formed or whether instead, it pushed the pelvic girdle forward simply exposing
more somites. Either way, it was an interesting experiment showing that simple modifications could alter the
morphology in pretty extreme ways.
The Georgia group talked about a variety of things including creating transgenic chickens, enameling teeth,
changing limb proportions, and changing mouth shape for inclusion of teeth. Brian Conde, who has worked on
multi-site, multi-investigator projects discussed systems for data sharing and analysis. Basically how we would
go about text mining and data sharing and storage.
Susan Chapman of Clemson University, who I brought in at the last minute, and who studies chicken tails, talked
about her research on a chicken called and arucana which is rumpless, missing its tail.
At the end my post docs talked about their current gene screens to determine timing of development and
apoptosis of the hands and tail.
I would very much like to share the videos with you, but am not sure how to proceed as they are quite large files.
Everyone was really happy with the summit, and the group has put together their proposal of which they have on
their dropbox site which I would like to share with you if there is a way to do so. I will also send it once I have
evaluated it. it was completed while I was away, and I need to explain a few things about it that they as a group
would not know, particularly about some portions which would not be tax deductible.
As for my personal life, I just asked Vanessa how she thought it was going and she said that since we had just
spent a week together in another country and she had not given any thought to killing me, it was a good sign. : )
She and I get along just great, but then we are both dino nerds and work virtually all the time.
Hope you are doing great as well!! Please give my best to the girls.
All the best,
Jack
EFTA00947376
On Nov 12, 2012, at 12:58 PM, Jeffrey Epstein wrote:
were you happy with the results. how are things personllay. ?
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