General07:32 · 4h ago

T-Rex Skeleton 'Gus' Set to Become Most Expensive Dinosaur Fossil at $30 Million Auction

YnetCenter
Translated & summarized from Ynet by baba
The story · English

A nearly complete Tyrannosaurus rex skeleton named "Gus" is scheduled for auction at Sotheby's in Manhattan, with a pre-sale estimate of $30 million, potentially making it the most expensive dinosaur fossil ever sold. Discovered in 2021 on a family cattle ranch in Harding County, South Dakota, within the renowned Hell Creek Formation, Gus is one of the most complete T. rex specimens, comprising 183 bones and representing about 61% completeness by bone count and 80% by mass. The skeleton stands 3.8 meters tall and measures approximately 11.6 meters long, featuring a 137 cm skull with 31 teeth and rare elements like a complete pelvis and perfect feet. The fossil also shows signs of survival battles, including bite scars and healed broken ribs.

The discovery originated from a chance encounter between the late ranch owner Gary "Gus" Licking and paleontologist Thomas Heitkamp, leading to a three-season excavation and subsequent three years of laboratory restoration. The skeleton was named in honor of Licking, who passed away before its completion. Unlike previous fossils sold with shared rights, Gus comes with full commercial copyrights, allowing the new owner to license replicas and casts worldwide.

This auction highlights ongoing tensions between public museums, which struggle with soaring fossil prices, and private collectors and billionaires who increasingly dominate the market. While public institutions lament being priced out, private sales have reached record sums, such as the 2020 sale of the T. rex "Stan" for $31.8 million and the 2024 sale of the Stegosaurus "Apex" for $44.6 million to hedge fund billionaire Ken Griffin. Experts warn that fossils in private hands risk being inaccessible for scientific research, as major journals often reject studies based on privately held specimens.

Sotheby's defends the high prices as necessary to fund the costly and dangerous fieldwork of fossil hunters, who often work in harsh conditions with personal funds. Critics argue that collaboration between landowners and museums could preserve fossils for science without astronomical costs. The debate centers on balancing public scientific responsibility with the realities of fossil market economics, as dinosaur fossils increasingly become luxury collectibles rather than purely scientific assets.

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