Showing posts with label Tyrannosaurus rex. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tyrannosaurus rex. Show all posts

Sunday, October 4, 2009

Samson...not sold



I guess money is tight in the fossil collection venue.

"For sale: a Tyrannosaurus rex skeleton"

The fossil, one of the most complete ever found, goes on the auction block at the Venetian casino as its curator frets: What if it doesn't sell? Worse, what if a tipsy gambler buys it?

by

Kate Linthicum

October 4th, 2009

latimes.com

The auctioneer gazed out at the audience, knowing this was the moment they'd waited for. Next up, he said, was lot No. 23 -- a "wonderful, exceptional, 66-million-year-old Tyrannosaurus rex skeleton known as Samson."

He gestured to the ferocious-looking skull sitting on a stand to his left. "There she is," he said. The people who had gathered in the elegant gallery at the Venetian hotel gasped.

Samson is one of the three most complete T. rex specimens ever discovered, possessing the most intact skull in existence.

But auctions are unpredictable, and dinosaurs are expensive. So an ugly prospect hung in the air Saturday: Might Samson not sell?

On Friday, Thomas Lindgren, the curator in charge, and auctioneer Patrick Meade had talked about just that between meetings with prospective buyers. People from across the world had expressed interest in Samson, but nobody was committed to bidding.

"If I'd have had this T. rex two years ago, we would have set world records," Lindgren said wistfully. But, he said, the recession had caused everyone -- museums, schools and even eccentric collectors with deep pockets -- to scale back.

To Lindgren, a dinosaur devotee who has spent 30 years of his life excavating, collecting and auctioning fossils, this was not just another sale. His professional reputation, he said, was on the line.

"This is the pinnacle of my career," he said. "I want it to be a home run. I want to be the guy that slid into home plate at the end of a grand slam at the end of the world series of paleontology."

He paused.

"I don't want to be the guy that struck out and lost the game."

Samson was discovered in Harding, S.D., in the late 1980s, when a rancher's son noticed some bones sticking up from the earth. A few years later, a pair of commercial fossil collectors cut a deal with the rancher, excavated the bones and sold them to an anonymous buyer. For more than a decade, Samson's bones remained in storage.

Then earlier this year, the owner contacted Los Angeles-based Bonhams & Butterfields about selling them.

When the auction house sent Lindgren, its co-director of natural history, to inspect the dinosaur, he got chills.

"I looked from bone to bone and realized what an amazing specimen this was," he said. "To actually be in the presence of the most magnificent species that ever walked the planet, it's almost like being in the presence of the holy grail of paleontology."

His affection for the dinosaur has grown over the last several months, Lindgren said. He spent nearly every day with Samson, preparing her for auction and then presiding over an exhibition at the Venetian, where she and other fossils to be auctioned off were on display.

During that time, Lindgren taught visitors about Samson's physiology and speculated about her life -- which he said was likely a violent one. Her skull has scars that were probably caused by another T. rex, he said, and the broken bones in her tail are evidence that she mated.

At the Venetian, Lindgren and Samson were a hit.

"People would ask me to autograph their exhibition guides," he said. "And little kids would come up and say, 'Thank you for bringing Samson to Las Vegas.' "

As their time together was coming to an end, Lindgren said, he had mixed feelings. While he would miss her, he hoped Samson would sell -- but to the right buyer.

"I'm just hoping we don't have someone holding a beer who just came off the slot machine thinking: 'Oh, I just hit the jackpot. Maybe I'll buy a dinosaur!' " Lindgren said. "Those are the nightmares I have."

He wanted Samson to end up at a public institution, like a museum, so that he and others could continue to enjoy her.

"I'm hoping it's not going to be a goodbye," Lindgren said.

On Saturday, he stood near the auction podium -- amped with adrenaline.

The room was packed with Las Vegas luminaries, like the casino's owner, Sheldon Adelson, as well as some of the biggest names in paleontology. Among them was Peter Larson, who helped excavate Sue, the T. rex fossil now in the collection of Chicago's Field Museum.

The anticipation grew as Meade led the bidding on, among other pieces, a 28-foot-long duck-billed dinosaur skeleton and a 7-foot fossil shark from the Permian period.

But excitement peaked when Meade introduced Samson.

He opened the bidding at $2.5 million. Someone immediately raised a paddle. Then an international collector's proxy jumped in.

The price climbed: $2.6 million, $2.7 million, $2.8 million . . .

When the bidding reached $3.6 million, Meade asked: "Anybody advance?" The audience was tense and silent. "Last chance," he said.

Then the gavel came down.

Samson hadn't sold.

The auction house passed on the $3.6-million offer, which failed to meet the set reserve price. (Bonhams & Butterfields would not disclose the minimum asking price.)

Bill Barker, a collector known as "Doc Fossil," said he felt bad for Lindgren. "It's certainly a hurt for him," Barker said. "I'm sorry Samson didn't go."

Lindgren too was disappointed. But that feeling eased when, a few minutes after the auction ended, he reported getting a call from "a major museum" asking about Samson's fate. When Lindgren explained that Samson hadn't sold, the museum said it might make a bid.


Samson is up for auction--3rd complete T-Rex

Wednesday, August 19, 2009

Samson is up for auction--3rd complete T-Rex


Sampson, the third most complete T-Rex dinosaur, will be auctioned in October. Who owns this massive skeleton? Was it found on public land and if so doesn't it belong to the public? Tom Lindgren [member of the auction house Bonhams & Butterfields] wants this to be the most expensive item of natural history sold. The article also mentions something that I have never understood or even seen a printed document on what it means..."museum standard" or "museum quality". I suppose it varies from one category of items to another but still what does it mean? Ask the Keno brothers?

"Third Most Complete T. Rex to Be Auctioned in Vegas"

by

Betsy Mason

August 18th, 2009

Wired

One of the largest and most complete Tyrannosaurus rex skeletons ever discovered is set to go on the auction block in Las Vegas in October.

The 66 million-year-old fossil was found 22 years ago in South Dakota and has come to be known as Samson. It is 40 feet long and 15 feet tall and consists of around 170 bones, more than half of a complete skeleton.

“In the last 110 years, there’s been a total of 46 specimens found of Tyrannosaurus rex of which this is the third most complete and has the finest skull,” said Tom Lindgren, who is co-director of natural history for the auction house Bonhams & Butterfields.

The last time a T. rex was auctioned, the most complete specimen ever found, known as Sue, went for more than $8 million dollars. The winner was the Chicago Field Museum.

Sue was still in pieces and unprepared when she was put on the block, and was only expected to fetch around 1 or 2 million dollars. Lindgren hopes Samson will exceed his estimated worth. One thing he has going for him is that he is fully prepared and mounted and ready to go on display.

“I’m going to estimate it’s in the neighborhood of 2 to 8 million, but it could easily go for upwards of $10 million,” Lindgren said. “I want to hold the record for a natural history auction.”

Samson is clearly the star of the upcoming auction, which will be held October 3 at the Venetian casino, but there will be more than 50 other lots of rare specimens.

Highlights include a 25-foot long shark, the largest fossil shark ever found.

Lindgren has also secured a reconstructed shark jaw with a full set of real teeth that stands eight feet tall and 10 feet wide and belonged to a shark that was probably around 80 feet long.

He’s trying to finalize the largest bony fish skeleton ever found, which is 17 feet long. Just 10 minutes before speaking with Wired.com, Lindgren learned he also has a woolly mammoth that stands around 12 feet tall.

“The items we have in this auction are definitely museum standard, or better,” he said. “Most of the museums in the world don’t have anything near what we have in this auction.”

The auction items will be on display to the public during Labor Day weekend, as well as for the two weeks preceding the auction.

Samson’s skull was discovered intact, unlike most skulls, including Sue’s, which are in pieces. There are bite marks from other dinosaurs and places where the bone has been eaten away by infection.

“This animal, when it died, was in a lot of pain,” Lindgren said. “But we don’t know what killed it.”

After Samson was originally excavated from a ranch by fossil collectors, it was sold to a private buyer from the Isle of Man, who then sold it to its current American owners.

Lindgren is hoping Samson lands somewhere the public will be able to appreciate him for years to come and is pushing for museums to participate.

At least 20 institutions have shown interest, “but then there’s always the elite that have a lot of money and like unique and unusual items, especially the Hollywood types,” he said. “There are a couple of major actors that are collectors of dinosauria.”

Because T. rex is only found in North America, Lindgren hopes it stays here. “It would be a shame if the third most complete specimen, with possibly the finest skull, went to another country,” he said.

“A specimen like this, it needs to be seen by everyone. It’s just spectacular.”

I wonder how much this T-Rex would bring...

Get It On

by

T-Rex

1972



Well you're dirty and sweet, clad in black
Don't look back and I love you
You're dirty and sweet, oh yeah
Well you're slim and you're weak
You've got the teeth of a hydra upon you
You're dirty sweet and you're my girl.

Chorus:
Get it on, bang the gong , get it on
Get it on, bang the gong, get it on

You're built like a car, you've got a hub cap diamond star halo
You're built like a car, oh yeah
You're an untamed youth that's the truth with your cloak full of eagles
You're dirty sweet and you're my girl.

Repeat chorus

You're windy and wild, you've got the blues in your shoes and your
stockings
You're windy and wild, oh yeah
You're built like a car, you've got a hub cap diamond star halo
You're dirty sweet and you're my girl.

Repeat chorus

You're dirty and sweet, clad in black, don't look back
And I love you
You're dirty and sweet, oh yeah
You dance when you walk so let's dance, take a chance, understand me
You're dirty sweet and you're my girl.

Repeat chorus and fade