The Citizen (KZN)

Preparing fossils like ‘putting together giant 3D puzzle’

-

Kingwood – Before a T-rex can tower over museum visitors or a triceratop­s can show off its huge horns, dinosaur fossils must first be painstakin­gly reconstruc­ted – cleaned, fit together and even painted.

For US restoratio­nist Lauren McClain, the process is like putting together a giant 3D puzzle.

McClain’s job begins at her home workshop near Houston, Texas, where she carefully clears away dirt stuck to the more than 60-million-year-old remains using a tiny drill with an air compressor, similar to a dentist’s tool.

Then, she must assemble this ancient puzzle – even though pieces are almost always missing.

She moulds fillings for the lost parts, plugging the holes and repairing the nicks that have appeared in edmontosau­rus femurs or megalodon teeth over millions of years. She has even worked on a fossil from a 200-million-year-old eurypterid­a, or sea scorpion.

McClain doesn’t actually like puzzles very much, she says. But when it “turns into a dinosaur... I can get down with those kinds of puzzles,” says the 33 year old.

“When you’ve got something that’s in a hundred pieces, you really have to study all of those edges and how they align and really, really hone in on those details to rebuild it into what it was,” McClain explains.

Many of the giants McClain reconstruc­ts once roamed the land which is now the United States – ranging from Florida in the southeast all the way to Montana and the Dakotas in the north and California in the west.

McClain has been a dinosaur buff since she was a child fan of Jurassic Park. She even held her wedding at the Houston Museum of Natural Science – home to several dino skeleton recreation­s.

While working as a graphic designer, she began joining fossil excavation­s a few years ago and with the help of a few profession­al palaeontol­ogist mentors, set up her own restoratio­n venture, called Big Sky Fossils.

McClain quit her desk job to focus on her company full time seven months ago. Recently, she has been working on the cranial dome of a pachycepha­losaurus belonging to a Texas museum. While looking for more space to expand her workshop, she’s been working in her garage to restore a hadrosauri­d femur almost as big as her.

First, she inserts a metal rod into the giant thigh bone, for stability. Next, she gives it a good clean and uses a powerful glue to bind all the pieces together.

Then, an epoxy putty fills in all the gaps where pieces of the fossil have fallen away. Finally, McClain paints all the new parts the same colour as the original.

“Restoring missing pieces from fossils, it’s oftentimes the hardest part,” she says.

“Because not only do you need to have an understand­ing of the anatomy of that specific dinosaur, but you need a good reference. I talk to a lot of palaeontol­ogists in order to get it right.”

Movies make audiences believe that dinosaur fossils are dug up from the ground intact, says David Temple, a palaeontol­ogy curator at the Houston Museum of Natural Science. “But, in reality, it’s not like that at all,” says Temple, speaking in the museum’s Cretaceous period section.

“Every fossil ever found needs some degree of curation, some degree of restoratio­n, some degree of consolidat­ion, because even the act of getting it out of the ground – it’s destructiv­e.” –

 ?? Pictures: AFP ?? JAW-DROPPING. Lauren McClain works on a mosasaur jaw. Dinosaur fossils must be painstakin­gly reconstruc­ted – cleaned, fitted together and painted – before being exhibited.
Pictures: AFP JAW-DROPPING. Lauren McClain works on a mosasaur jaw. Dinosaur fossils must be painstakin­gly reconstruc­ted – cleaned, fitted together and painted – before being exhibited.
 ?? ?? MAMMOTH TASK. Fossil preparatio­n and restoratio­nist Lauren McClain holds a fossil of a Triceratop­s in her Houston, Texas, workshop.
MAMMOTH TASK. Fossil preparatio­n and restoratio­nist Lauren McClain holds a fossil of a Triceratop­s in her Houston, Texas, workshop.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa