"Gus", a mounted Tyrannosaurus Rex skeleton, one of the largest T. rex ever found, is pictured during a press preview at the Sotheby's Breuer building in New York, on July 1, 2026. The 67-million-year-old skeleton, found during an excavation on private land in South Dakota and comprising 183 fossil bones, representing up to 80% of the animal's total bone mass, making it one of the most complete T. rex fossils ever found, will be put to auction as part of the "Summer Season at the Breuer" from late June through mid-August 2026. (Photo by TIMOTHY A. CLARY / AFP via Getty Images)

If you ever wanted to own an actual and not just a toy, you now have a chance. But it’s going to cost you some bones. Millions of them.

Read more Fire breaks out at a pub in Bangkok, killing at least 27 people, officials say

The fossil known as “Gus” will go up for auction Tuesday morning at Sotheby’s New York City office. The starting bid for the dinosaur is $19 million and the auction house estimates it could sell for $20 to $30 million.

Gus was found in Harding County, S.D., on private land in 2021, according to Sotheby’s. The skeleton, which is 38 feet long and 12 and half feet tall, is believed to be from the late Cretaceous period from about 67 million years ago.

An artistic illustration of the Nagatitan, the largest dinosaur discovered in Southeast Asia.

Science

Researchers unearth Southeast Asia’s largest dinosaur

“Judging from the overall size and degree of bone development it can be determined that Gus’ skeleton belonged to a very large, robust, adult individual,” the auction house said in the listing.

Thomas Heitkamp, president of Theropoda Expeditions, the company that excavated the site, said in a Sotheby’s video about the discovery that nearly a thousand pieces were collected.

The creature is named after the owner of the ranch where it was discovered, Gary “Gus” Licking. He died during the excavation process, which ran through 2023, and was not able to see Gus fully assembled, according to Cassandra Hatton of Sotheby’s.

“Gary had for years roamed around his 6,500 acre property and seeing teeth and little bits of fossils and such, and he realized that there was probably something really important under the ground,” Hatton said in the video.

In this illustration, a pack of Nanotyrannus attacks a juvenile T. rex. Scientists say a well-known fossil shows that there was more than one tyrannosaur species roaming the Earth.

Science

Scientists thought this fossil was a teen T. rex. Turns out it’s a new tyrannosaur

Gus is one of the largest and most complete specimens ever found, according to Sotheby’s.

Read more Toronto police looking for suspects after deadly shooting at festival

It’s not the first time dinosaur bones have been for sale to the highest bidder.

The first auction for a dinosaur was held by Sotheby’s in 1997. The creature, a named Sue, was purchased by a few large companies for the Field Museum in Chicago. It went for $8.4 million.

In 2024, Apex the stegosaurus sold for $44.6 million, the most ever for a dinosaur fossil. It was purchased by billionaire investor Ken Griffin, who loaned it to the American Natural History Museum in New York for four years.

Paleontologist Scott Persons, who is the curator of natural history at the South Carolina State Museum, says dinosaurs fetching tens of millions of dollars reflects an “increase in market demand.”

“More and more dinosaurs are being sold this way and at ridiculous prices,” he says in an email to NPR.

He says people who can afford to spend this much on an auction could do more to support further research.

“A sum like that could endow a research program at a public museum of your choosing,” he says. “That would pay for a career’s worth of fieldwork, the discovery of whole new species, and the public exhibition of the findings.”

Read more What to know about the cyclosporiasis outbreak hitting more than half of U.S. states

By admin

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *