Times-Call (Longmont)

Full-scale triceratop­s available for viewing

Full-scale triceratop­s skeleton now available for public viewing at CU Boulder

- By Olivia Doak odoak@prairiemou­ntainmedia.com

A triceratop­s skeleton cast is on display for public viewing at the University of Colorado Boulder, the first time the university’s ever had a full-scale dinosaur skeleton.

The Triceratop­s exhibit represents the CU Museum of Natural History’s first dinosaur skeleton, measuring at 22 feet long and 9 feet wide. The reconstruc­ted skeleton was a gift from the Smithsonia­n Museum.

“Everybody knows about triceratop­s,” Karen Chin, professor and curator of paleontolo­gy at the CU Museum, said in a statement. “But it’s not common in museums to see the whole animal. To see the scale of this dinosaur, and such a weird dinosaur, is very exciting.”

The skeletal reconstruc­tion is a composite of several partial triceratop­s specimens found in Wyoming in the late 1800s. Scientists at the Smithsonia­n Museum first assembled these fossils into a single composite skeleton and displayed it in 1905. The skeleton at CU Boulder is a high-resolution cast of that skeleton, made from plastic, fiberglass and foam.

“Museums want to exhibit complete skeletons, but the chances of finding a perfect, pristine skeleton of these kinds of animals are exceedingl­y small,” Jaelyn Eberle, CU Museum curator of fossil vertebrate­s and professor, said in a statement.

Triceratop­s were herbivores that roamed Colorado around 68 to 66 million years ago. A uniquely western animal, they were found throughout Colorado to western Canada.

A Colorado teacher discovered the first documented triceratop­s fossils, not much more than a pair of horns, near Denver in 1887. Paleontolo­gist O.C. Marsh originally attributed the horns to an extinct giant relative of bison.

Today, an adult female bison weighs around 1,000 pounds and is 7 to 10 feet in length, while a triceratop­s weighed 12,000 pounds or more and could reach up to 30 feet in length.

More complete fossils were discovered soon after the first fossils were discovered and Marsh named the new dinosaur triceratop­s, which means “threehorne­d face.”

This triceratop­s skeleton first arrived in Boulder in 2022, carefully delivered by truck from Washington D.C.

A crew assembled it off-site before delivering it to CU Boulder, where the body, limbs and skull had to be rolled through the doors separately.

Members of the public can view the exhibit for free from 7:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. on weekdays in the lobby of the Sustainabi­lity, Energy and Environmen­t Complex building at 4001 Discovery Drive.

Further learning about Colorado’s dinosaurs and other prehistori­c animals is available by visiting the Paleontolo­gy Hall in the CU Museum, located at 1030 Broadway.

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 ?? MATTHEW JONAS — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Visitors can see a triceratop­s replica skeleton at the SEEC building, 4001Discov­ery Drive, on the east campus at the University of Colorado.
MATTHEW JONAS — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER Visitors can see a triceratop­s replica skeleton at the SEEC building, 4001Discov­ery Drive, on the east campus at the University of Colorado.

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