Blood vessels recovered from T. rex bone

Blood vessels recovered from T. rex bone (New Scientist: 24-Mar-05)
Palaeontologists have extracted soft, flexible structures that appear to be blood vessels from the bone of a Tyrannosaurus rex that died 68 million years ago. They also have found small red microstructures that resemble red blood cells. The discovery suggests biological information can be recovered from a wider range of fossil material than realised, which would greatly help the tracing of evolutionary relationships.

If this story turns out to be true, Holy Crap!

See also: T. rex fossil has 'soft tissues' (BBC)