Collectibles

For sale: 28-ft-long, 155 million-year-old carnivorous dinosaur skeleton

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This beast, believed to be from the Allosaurus family, originally called the Eastern Bighorn Mountains in Wyoming its home between 157 and 152 million years ago
Aguttes
Every aspect of the origin of the specimen is legally authenticated and has all the supporting documents
Aguttes
In December 2017  Aguttes sold the largest Wooly Mammoth skeleton ever to go to auction
Aguttes
Aguttes most recent dinosaur skeleton sale was in December 2016, when a nearly complete 7.5 metre long and 2.5 metre tall Allosaurus skeleton (pictured above) sold for €1,128,375 (US$1,191,740)
Aguttes
Aguttes most recent dinosaur skeleton sale was in December 2016, when a nearly complete 7.5 metre long and 2.5 metre tall Allosaurus skeleton (pictured above) sold for €1,128,375 (US$1,191,740)
Aguttes
The specimen is mounted on a structure of stainless steel that permits it to be removed for study.
Aguttes
This beast, believed to be from the Allosaurus family, originally called the Eastern Bighorn Mountains in Wyoming its home between 157 and 152 million years ago
Aguttes
As fascinating as this 155-million-year-old skeleton is, it is impossible not to be constantly reminded that it was a carnivorous creature and meeting one in the flesh would have been deeply unpleasant
Aguttes
The tusks of the largest Woolly Mammoth ever to go to auction were 3.32 metres and 3.0 metres long, weighing 76 kg and 62 kg respectively
Aguttes
The extreme weight of the original skull has created a secondary exhibition of the skull alone, while the skull on the skeleton has been recreated using a much lighter resin replica
Aguttes
The first parts of the skeleton were found in 2013, and during 2014 and 2015 it was excavated from the rocks of the Morrison Formation in Johnson County, Wyoming, USA. It is currently on display at the Gare des Brotteaux in Lyon, France and will soon be on display on the first floor of the Eiffel Tower in Paris where the sale will take place in June.
Aguttes
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At 8.7 meters (28.5 ft) long and 2.6 meters (8.5 ft) high, and with a price tag somewhere north of US$1.5 million, this 155 million-year-old skeleton is not for everyone, but it is certainly one of the most impressive and imposing artifacts of natural history ever to go to auction.

This beast, believed to be from the Allosaurus family, but possibly from an entirely new branch of the Allosaurid family tree, originally called the Eastern Bighorn Mountains in Wyoming its home between 157 and 152 million years ago.

The first parts of the skeleton were found in 2013, and during 2014 and 2015 it was excavated from the rocks of the Morrison Formation in Johnson County, Wyoming.

In all, more than 70 percent of what can be seen is the original dinosaur bone of the same creature, with the skeleton being prepared in 2017 by European specialists.

Every aspect of the origin of the specimen is legally authenticated and has all the supporting documents
Aguttes

For those concerned about the legal aspects of the skeleton, Aguttes auction house has handled this type of remarkable specimen before on several occasions and has enough experience to be able to assemble all the documents to make any buyer comfortable.

Every aspect of the origin of the specimen is legally authenticated and has all the supporting documents, its exact location of extraction with GPS point, the title of the owner of the land, the landowner's rights of ownership in the fossil remains, the excavation license, customs formalities and shipping.

The skeleton has all the paperwork so that it can be purchased, transported, loaned, resold, exhibited, reproduced by casting, disseminated, published, and constitutes a full exploitable financial and cultural investment. It is estimated by Aguttes that it will sell for between €1.2 million and €1.8 million (US$1.5 and US$2.2 million).

Aguttes most recent dinosaur skeleton sale was in December 2016, when a nearly complete 7.5 metre long and 2.5 metre tall Allosaurus skeleton (pictured above) sold for €1,128,375 (US$1,191,740)
Aguttes

Aguttes' most recent dinosaur skeleton sale was in December 2016, when a nearly complete 7.5-m (24.6-ft) long and 2.5-m (8.2 ft) tall Allosaurus skeleton (pictured above) sold for €1,128,375 (US$1,191,740) in the French city of Lyon.The bones of that dinosaur were also found in 2013 in the Morrison Formation, not far from the discovery site of the current skeleton for sale. The main difference between the skeletons is that whereas the previous skeleton was clearly an Allosaurus, the new specimen for sale may be a previously unknown species.

In December 2017  Aguttes sold the largest Wooly Mammoth skeleton ever to go to auction
Aguttes

Aguttes is one of the world's most renowned auction houses, but huge skeletons is one of its specialities, and in December, 2017 it sold the largest wooly mammoth skeleton ever to go to auction. The 15,000-year-old behemoth skeleton was 3.4 m (11 ft) tall, with a total length of more than 8 m (26 ft) and it is estimated that the living mammoth would have weighed more than 1,400 kg (3,086 lb).

The tusks of the largest Woolly Mammoth ever to go to auction were 3.32 metres and 3.0 metres long, weighing 76 kg and 62 kg respectively
Aguttes

The tusks alone were 3.32 m (10.9 ft) and 3.0 m (9.8 ft) long, weighing 76 kg (168 lb) and 62 kg (137 lb), respectively. The mammoth skeleton was estimated to sell for €450,000 to €490,000 and eventually fetched €548,250 (US$651,300). The Faena Hotel in Miami has a permanent showcase of the world's most expensive and best known wooly mammoth skeleton. Artist Damien Hirst's golden mammoth was sold for €11 million (US$13.6 million) at a charity sale in May 2014.

Source: Aguttes

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1 comment
SteveO
That would totally fit in my living room, but it would block the TV and my wife would be ticked... Oh well, maybe next time.