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Science 4 January 2008:
Vol. 319. no. 5859, p. 33
DOI: 10.1126/science.1147046


Comment on "Protein Sequences from Mastodon and Tyrannosaurus rex Revealed by Mass Spectrometry"
Mike Buckley, Angela Walker, Simon Y. W. Ho, Yue Yang, Colin Smith, Peter Ashton, Jane Thomas Oates, Enrico Cappellini, Hannah Koon, Kirsty Penkman, Ben Elsworth, Dave Ashford, Caroline Solazzo, Phil Andrews, John Strahler, Beth Shapiro, Peggy Ostrom, Hasand Gandhi, Webb Miller, Brian Raney, Maria Ines Zylber, M. Thomas P. Gilbert, Richard V. Prigodich, Michael Ryan, Kenneth F. Rijsdijk, Anwar Janoo, Matthew J. Collins

Supporting Online Material

This supplement contains:
SOM Text
References

Download supplement

This file is in Adobe Acrobat PDF format.

Other Supporting Online Material for this manuscript includes the following:
(available at www.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/full/319/5859/33c/DC1)
Table S1
Collagen a1 Sequences

Table S1 and sequence data. Interpretations of published spectra, in Microsoft Excel format, and collagen a1 sequence data, in text (ASCII) format. Files are packaged as a compressed archive, in *.zip format; users should download the compressed file to their machine and decompress the file on their local hard drive, using the instructions below.


Instructions for downloading and decompressing files:

  1. Create a temporary folder on your machine's hard drive.
  2. Save the compressed archive to the temporary folder you created, using the links above.
  3. Decompress the compressed file in the temporary folder using decompression software such as WinZip (Windows; www.winzip.com) or StuffIt Expander (Windows and Mac; www.stuffit.com).

Excel files can be opened and viewed using Microsoft Excel, the spreadsheet module of the freely downloadable Open Office suite, or the freely downloadable Excel Viewer available from Microsoft. ASCII files can be opened with any text editor.





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Science. ISSN 0036-8075 (print), 1095-9203 (online)