finally, you are here! i've been working without the encouragement of my peers for too long. welcome, welcome! mr. hammond never lets me publish and he's interested only in results, not in science. these are hamachi-hood automated gene sequencers, those are cray xmp's, supercomputers that take dna information and organize it. in this room, we take fragmented or incomplete dna strands and compare them to other incomplete strands. the computers make sever al trillion calculations to provide us with a complete dna strand - the genetic code of an extinct animal. we use unfertilized crocodile ova as our breeding medium. well, we have computer techniques to try and map out finds on an evolutionary basis. but mostly, we just grow it and find out what it is. if it's something we're interested in, and it survives, we keep it. this is the incubation room. we keep the temperature at ninetynine degrees and a relative humidity of one hundred percent. we also run a high oxygen concentration, up to thirty-three percent, so if you feel faint, please tell me right away. reptile eggs contain large amounts of yolk but no water at all. the embryos must extract water from the surrounding environment. children, please do not touch! the eggs are permeable to skin oils. yes, they are, the embryos are mechanically inserted and then hatched in this room. but we've managed to sufficiently mimic the actual biological process - these creatures rupture the plastic membrane that they're contained in when they're born. like real births. eggs that are determined viable spend their last couple days in our specially- designed incubators, which help accelerate the pre-natal developmental stages. which is interesting becaus e we're having a problem with the adult animals - all the security doors are open. someone has been in my laboratory and the eggs have been disturbed. why? but that could take weeks. what would be faster? try keychecks. what's that? what's it mean? if i did that i'd leave a way to turn it back on. in case i had to. i'm sure nedry did. you're find it. what is taking arnold so long? this room is too cold. my eggs will be damaged. i'm sure you'll find your virus . or a similar one. all animals carry many viruses in a dormant condition. it's almost impossible to say with certainty which are the same strains. what the hell does harding know? he's a veterinarian, not a pathologist. no point in everyone being exhausted. i'm sure muldoon will find dr. grant as soon as there is light. who gave you permission - that's absurd. you're qualified to interpret x-rays of living dinosaurs? i doubt it. it took me many months to learn. you're making a lot of assumptions here. she didn't have a right to explore my lab. just some adjustment in the code is required. so? just reset - shut the system down and you'll clear the memory. everything will be in the normal wakeup mode. and reset. arnold's about to get the phones up. my good god. what's that, john? looks like you are. print the system status log. you shut down as six thirty-four this morning, and when you started back up, it was with auxiliary power. outside? in the generator building? now, there's four. oh that's good, that must be the water pipe. you're really close now, there's a cabinet just above your head. reach up and open it. the handle turns to the left. it's a large throw-switch. pull it down, count to three, and push it back up. that's all there is to it. keep it open! i'm coming! help!