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Adiraiju — Spinosaurus aegyptiacus sornaensis

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Published: 2015-09-19 12:17:32 +0000 UTC; Views: 3302; Favourites: 44; Downloads: 11
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(From an introduction to a textbook regarding the incident, written in 2003)

    In the year 1993, the world-famous up-and-coming bioengineering corporation InGen suddenly and abruptly announced bankruptcy, much to the astonishment of the general public (and the dismay of several thousand stockholders).

    Exactly what had happened was initially blocked by a great deal of red tape (much of it supplied by the government of Costa Rica), but after a concentrated investigation by the U.S. Justice Department, CEO John Hammond – shortly before announcing his retirement – decided to, in his own words, “come clean” in August of 1994.

    Amazingly, it was revealed that InGen’s research into genetic engineering had managed to succeed in cloning a living animal from a few strands of DNA – and more than that, they had succeeded in cloning living dinosaurs, having extracted their DNA from blood taken from abdomens of mosquitoes preserved in Mesozoic-era amber. Moreover, InGen had decided to display these dinosaurs in a theme park/zoo on the small island of Isla Nublar off the coast of Costa Rica. Amazingly, over a dozen species had been put on display, and the park was scheduled to open in July of 1994.

    Unfortunately, an industrial spy named Dennis Nedry, working for a rival corporation named BioSyn, became the key for the theme park’s downfall. Several catastrophes occurred at once to spell the park’s doom: Nedry shut down several of the park’s main security measures in order to cover his tracks when he stole several embryos and attempted to get them to his agent on a boat on Isla Nublar’s shore. This coincided with a trial run-through of the park by a small group of scientists and experts – a time when the security measures were scheduled to be temporarily decreased – and a massive tropical storm tore several of the fences down. To make matters worse, Nedry was apparently killed on the way to the docks, and was unable to start the security systems back up. The result was catastrophic: the dinosaurs quickly overran the island, destroying the infrastructure and making it far, far too dangerous for visitors.

    The final nail in the company’s coffin came when it was discovered that the damaged, ancient dinosaur DNA had been filled in with frog DNA by the cloning division’s leader, Dr. Henry Wu. The frog DNA mutated the dinosaurs – very slightly, but enough – and the resulting animals were found to be able to change sex in a single-sex environment, allowing the creatures to breed. Worse still, the DNA had changed their genetic code enough that it was almost certain that the animals bore little resemblance to their prehistoric counterparts. Dr. Grant loudly decried them as “genetically engineered theme park monsters”, though reception to this by the public was skeptical.

    In the years to come, what genetic information was relayed to the public proved conclusively that the animals on Isla Nublar (and later, it was discovered, Isla Sorna – a “Site B” designed to observe the creatures before they were released on Isla Nublar) were not, strictly speaking, true dinosaurs. For all intents and purposes, the animals on Isla Nublar, in Dr. Alan Grant’s less-than-subtle words, were “Genetically Engineered Theme Park Monsters”, designed to be as accurate to the ancient beasts as possible, but restricted in accuracy by the scientists’ current knowledge of dinosaurs. Nonetheless, Dr. Wu’s impressive strides in the field of bioengineering are being studied and analyzed to this day. Isla Sorna and Isla Nublar have been officially quarantined by the UN, with few individuals being given permission to enter or leave. Rumors of the Masrani Corporation’s interest in purchasing the islands seem to be more accurate every day…

      (From Dr. Miller's private journals)     
   
    The disastrous rescue mission instigated by Paul and Amanda Kirby in the summer of 2001 showed that Ingen was up to more than their official manifests stated. The would-be rescuers were chased all over the island - and some of them were killed - by a Spinosaurus, a gigantic superpredator that dwarfed even the Tyrannosaurus in size and ferocity. In fact, as if to drive the point home, they actually witnessed the giant animal killing a subadult rex. The persistent and vicious predator was apparently capable of swimming very well, and was the terror of the northern half of Isla Sorna. It remains unknown as to why the Spinosaurus was never placed on Ingen's official lists, but it was made clear that the animal was deemed as being even more dangerous than the Tyrannosaurus, and it could never have ben safely displayed on Isla Nublar.

    Update: A leaked E-mail from the Masrani corporation has suggested that the Spinosaurus has been killed by the teams scouring Isla Sorna, with high-powered rifles, and at least one minigun. However, it's been made quite clear that it has been deemed too vicious and dangerous for one of these monsters to ever be displayed in the Jurassic World resort - save as a massive, bleached skeleton. 

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Comments: 9

Lediblock2 [2017-10-23 14:50:29 +0000 UTC]

Building on Grisador's comment, perhaps the Spinosaurus skeleton on Nublar was from a more accurate cloned specimen that was meant to be an attraction but, like its Sorna cousin, it proved too dangerous and got itself killed when it tried to challenge Rexy.

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Adiraiju In reply to Lediblock2 [2017-10-26 05:03:16 +0000 UTC]

Not a bad idea...

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maxvision92 [2016-11-27 09:10:31 +0000 UTC]

I read a fan theory somewhere that the Spinosaurus was basically Wu's "prototype" for Indominus Rex, like, that he had been planning to create a real monster to sell to the highest bidder, and given the ability displayed by the Spino, I think he came close when he made this thing.

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Adiraiju In reply to maxvision92 [2016-11-29 13:55:42 +0000 UTC]

I like this concept, especially since Spinosaurus was never on Ingen's list of attractions to be displayed, plus the fact that the realistic Spinosaurus wasn't as impressive as the one in JPIII, which leads to the possibility that they Ingen's nastier elements were deliberately trying to hide their experiments from Hammond under the veneer of an honest new attempt at an attraction.

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maxvision92 In reply to Adiraiju [2016-11-29 18:12:35 +0000 UTC]

That keeps it all in line with the line that InGen COULD change the dinos to make them more in line with modern theories about how they looked, acted, etc., but kept them the exact same for the tourists.

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Adiraiju In reply to maxvision92 [2016-12-05 00:23:42 +0000 UTC]

Indeed it does, and I like that interpretation myself. Especially given the fact that the Raptors look almost nothing like their real-life counterparts, but in this universe, the public's imagination has already been totally captured by "The Big One" and her underlings' exploits in the original Jurassic Park.

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grisador [2016-04-18 19:07:25 +0000 UTC]

Nice work


Thought the director confirmed that the skeleton at JW doesn't belong to Sorn spinosaurus

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Adiraiju In reply to grisador [2016-04-19 04:23:29 +0000 UTC]

He did? Oopsy-doopsy. Thanks for letting me know!

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grisador In reply to Adiraiju [2016-04-27 17:34:14 +0000 UTC]

Very welcome !
There's a possibility too that states the Spino of JPIII would appear on Jurassic World II too

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