Skeleton of dinosaur set for auction
The 55ft-long (17 metre) specimen of long-necked Diplodocus longus is
believed to be first sale at UK auction of a large dinosaur skeleton
A giant skeleton of a dinosaur which last roamed Earth more than 150
million years ago is set to fetch up to £600,000 at a British auction in
November.
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The 55ft-long (17 metre) specimen of
long-necked Diplodocus longus is
believed to be first sale at UK auction of a large dinosaur
skeleton |
The 55ft-long (17 metre) specimen of the long-necked Diplodocus
longus is believed to be the first sale at a UK auction of a large
dinosaur skeleton, according to experts.
The 19ft-tall (six metre) female skeleton, nicknamed "Misty", was
found almost completely intact in 2009 by the sons of palaeontologist
Raimund Albersdoerfer near a quarry in Wyoming in the United States.
Albersdoerfer had been taking part in an excavation at a
privately-owned quarry when he sent his sons to dig in an area nearby
"to get them off his back".
To their father's astonishment, Benjamin and Jacob returned to him at
the end of the day to say they had found an enormous bone.
Nine weeks later, Albersdoerfer's team dug out "Misty", and she has
been painstakingly prepared at a leading fossil laboratory in Holland
before being assembled in the UK.
The skeleton is now set to sell for an estimated price of £400,000 to
£600,000 at Summers Place Auctions in Billingshurst, West Sussex, on
November 27.
It is being auctioned as part of Summers Place's Evolution Sale,
which is being curated by natural history expert and author Errol
Fuller. Mr Fuller, who has written a series of books on extinct
creatures, said: "There are probably about six of these in the great
museums of the world, including in Pittsburg and Washington. "You are
talking about a very rare item indeed. Even if you were lucky enough to
find one in the first place, the digging out and the preparation then
involved is an enormous undertaking.
"The rock that it was embedded in would have been extremely hard to
break away from the bones, and you couldn't go at it with a
sledge-hammer because the bones were vulnerable to breaking."
Mr Fuller said the skeleton could appeal to one of the emerging
museums in the Far East or Middle East, or as a private show-piece to
someone of great wealth.
- PA |