The Arizona Republic

Project seeks funding to uncover Utah fossils

- AZ

SALT LAKE CITY - Utah paleontolo­gists are asking people to help raise $100,000 so they can extract Utahraptor fossils from a 9-ton block of stone to find out more about this sharp-clawed predator that lived during the Cretaceous Period.

The Utahraptor Project, a GoFundMe account with a $100,000 goal, will go toward uncovering bones inside the “Utahraptor Block,” a quicksand trap about the size of a king-size bed.

After starting the project last September, donations stalled around $16,000. But funding doubled almost overnight after a New York Times article highlighte­d the crowdfundi­ng efforts.

Donations totaled more than $33,110 as of earlier this month, the Deseret News reported.

“We’ve put a lot of blood, sweat and tears into collecting this thing, and we want to see the project through. And we want to see it done right,” said fossil preparator and Utahraptor Project leader Scott Madsen.

The “Utahraptor Block” was discovered in 2001 by a geology student who spotted a bone sticking out from the Cedar Mountain hillside.

The student alerted Madsen and state paleontolo­gist Jim Kirkland. The two paleontolo­gists searched the mountainsi­de, “armed with one photograph and a vague descriptio­n of where this thing was in an ocean of rock,” Madsen said.

They found the site after hours of searching, but it took more than a decade to get the 9-ton sandstone slab off the hillside and into a museum lab in Lehi.

Madsen found that at least six dinosaurs are trapped inside the rock, with bones lying like pick-up sticks.

At least one dinosaur is a herbivore, possibly an iguanodont. The rest are Utahraptor­s, from “Jurassic World”-size adults to juveniles to newborn hatchlings. Madsen believes the bones could revolution­ize the image of the Utahraptor.

The Utahraptor is typically displayed as 23 feet long, lanky, feathered and longclawed. The shape and structure of the new Utahraptor bones are a bit different from what paleontolo­gists thought the dinosaur looked like.

The juveniles are more stout, like adults. Madsen theorizes the dinosaurs may have hunted in family packs since a large range of Utahraptor ages were found in the sandstone.

“This might be the only well-documented quicksand trap in the dinosaur record,” Madsen said. “We’ve kind of got one shot at getting this right.”

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 ?? ADAM FONDREN/THE DESERET NEWS VIA AP ?? Paleontolo­gist Rick Hunter meticulous­ly excavates rock from around the raptor bones at Thanksgivi­ng Point in Lehi, Utah, on Aug. 31.
ADAM FONDREN/THE DESERET NEWS VIA AP Paleontolo­gist Rick Hunter meticulous­ly excavates rock from around the raptor bones at Thanksgivi­ng Point in Lehi, Utah, on Aug. 31.

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