A fossilised Tyrannosaurus rex skeleton bought for a report $50.1m this morning (14 July) at Sotheby’s New York in a much-anticipated public sale. One of many largest and most full fossils of its type, the 67-million-year-old “Gus” hammered at $43m, properly above its pre-sale estimate, promoting to an nameless cellphone bidder.
The bidding for Gus shortly went to its higher estimate of $30m, then slowed. Throughout deliberate pauses, the auctioneer reminded bidders of the “as soon as in a lifetime alternative” to personal this 38-ft-long specimen mounted on a metal armature in a threatening predatory pose. The bidding lasted roughly ten minutes, with the mysterious winner outbidding six others.
The earlier record-holder for the most costly dinosaur fossil was a Stegosaurus skeleton nicknamed “Apex”. It bought in 2024 for $44.6m (additionally at Sotheby’s) to the hedge-fund billionaire Ken Griffin, who has loaned it to New York’s American Museum of Pure Historical past Museum for 4 years.
Gus’s stays have been discovered over three years of excavation at a cattle ranch in South Dakota. The skeleton, named for the ranch’s proprietor, includes 183 fossilised bones and is 61% full by bone rely (75% to 80% by mass). It took a number of years to wash and put together the fossils, together with fabrication of fill-in segments—a few of which have been created utilizing 3D printing.
Gus’s formidable head Picture: Matthew Sherman, courtesy Sotheby’s
The 12.5-ft-tall Gus was on public show at Sotheby’s Breuer Constructing for the primary two weeks of July. The dinosaur’s formidable head was displayed within the foyer, whereas a reproduction was positioned atop the skeleton upstairs. The cranium is especially fragile, in line with the wall textual content, and the public sale home didn’t wish to danger inserting it atop the physique. This gave guests an opportunity to look intently on the large cranium and people imply, flesh-ripping enamel.
Gus lived in a tough, dino-eat-dino period. As Sotheby’s writes in its description: “The skeleton shows various pathologies, together with indicators of tyrannosaurid chunk marks to the cranium bones and proper dentary, in addition to to a number of postcranial parts, all sustained by both fight or autopsy scavenging, along with accidents which occurred throughout the lifetime of the person, with fractured and healed bones discernable in a number of ribs and gastralia.”
There was some controversy across the sale of such extraordinary specimens to non-public people, which may probably deprive scientists of additional entry to them for analysis functions. Because the vertebrate palaeontologist Richard Butler lately informed The Guardian: “A fossil not in a recognised museum assortment can’t be studied and is subsequently misplaced to analysis. Fossils have been purchased and bought for a whole bunch of years, however costs are more and more out of the attain of museums, a lot to the detriment of science.”







