Times Colonist

‘Duelling’ dinosaurs could fetch $9 million at auction

- AMINA KHAN

A pair of fossil dinosaur skeletons dubbed the Montana Duelling Dinosaurs are headed for auction rather than straight to a museum. The duo, discovered touching on a Montana ranch in 2006, appear to be relatives of Tyrannosau­rus rex and Triceratop­s locked in mortal combat.

The long-dead dinosaurs, on the auction block Nov. 19, are valued at $7 million to $9 million US, according to auction house Bonhams.

It’s unlikely a museum would be able to afford that price tag, said Luis Chiappe, a paleontolo­gist at the Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County who was not involved in the find.

“I really doubt that there will be any museum with the kind of money available to purchase them, which is unfortunat­e,” he said. “Ideally it should remain in public trust.”

The fossils — which are nearly complete, and even include a little skin tissue, according to Bonhams — could potentiall­y provide researcher­s with a wealth of informatio­n, Chiappe said.

“These interactio­ns in the fossil record are extremely rare,” Chiappe said, stressing that very little is known about the so-called duelling dinosaurs.

The skeletons may not look pretty right now, half-buried as they are in chunks of the original rock in which they were found and then wrapped in plaster. But this makes them much more scientific­ally valuable than if they were cleaned and put on display. Frozen in the rock, the bones help scientists understand how the animal’s limbs would have naturally moved together, and shows them what the dino was doing in its final moments.

“If they were extracted and mounted, forget about it,” Chiappe said. “You’re never going to figure it out.”

Also, analyzing the sediment around the bones can help determine where these two fossils originated — because it isn’t yet entirely clear that they were fighting, Chiappe said, “duelling” nickname notwithsta­nding.

“If you want to prove or determine whether these animals died in some kind of combat, you really need to look carefully at the sediments,” Chiappe said. “There are a number of things that need to be determined before you say, ‘Oh, these animals killed each other in a duel.’ ”

Perhaps the carnivore had come to scavenge the herbivore’s already-dead body, Chiappe said. Perhaps it had died far away and its body had somehow ended up right by its fossil companion’s corpse.

But if the duo do turn out to be duelling, it’s an extremely rare find, Chiappe said. To his knowledge, he said, only one other pair has been found: two fighting dinosaurs from the Gobi desert. This prehistori­c brawl is now considered by Mongolia to be a national treasure.

Whatever the animals were up to when they died, they could provide a wealth of valuable informatio­n as individual­s. The Triceratop­s relative may be a whole new species, according to Bonhams.

As for the fossil carnivore, it’s unclear whether it was a Nanotyrann­us, or simply a juvenile T. rex. It may even be that all fossils known as Nanotyrann­us are simply young versions of T. rex, Chiappe said. Having such a fully articulate­d skeleton could help solve that mystery, he said.

 ??  ?? “Duelling” dinosaurs: Likely to go to a private bidder.
“Duelling” dinosaurs: Likely to go to a private bidder.

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