why we can't create Jurassic Park no matter how much money u throw at it:
From my own deep dive into paleontology and fossil research, I've learned that the biggest hurdle in recreating dinosaurs lies in the nature of fossilization itself. When an organism dies, its soft tissues decay rapidly or are chemically altered during fossilization. This process replaces organic material with minerals, essentially turning bones into rock, and destroying crucial cell structures and proteins. Scientists have occasionally found traces of ancient proteins and fragments of bone tissue chemically bound to minerals, but these are far too degraded to extract usable DNA. Without intact DNA, cloning dinosaurs is currently impossible. DNA molecules degrade over time, and after millions of years, surviving strands are fragmented beyond reconstruction. Even attempts to recover DNA from more recent extinct species have had limited success due to these factors. Moreover, the complexity of replicating the exact ancient environment needed to support dinosaur life adds another layer of difficulty. Dinosaurs evolved in ecosystems that don't exist today. This means that even if we could recreate them, their survival poses significant unknowns. Having read expert discussions and research papers, it’s clear that while Hollywood’s Jurassic Park captures the imagination, the reality is constrained by fundamental biological and geological limitations. Our current technology can recruit bird genes to mimic some dinosaur traits—since birds are modern-day descendants of certain dinosaurs—but bringing back fully living dinosaurs remains beyond our scientific reach. Thus, despite any amount of money, the realities of fossil chemistry, DNA degradation, and ecological factors mean that Jurassic Park will remain a work of fiction for the foreseeable future.












































































