Dinosaur Mummy!

Homerboy

Lifer
Mar 1, 2000
30,890
5,001
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http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/200...p_on_sc/dinosaur_mummy


BISMARCK, N.D. - Using tiny brushes and chisels, workers picking at a big greenish-black rock in the basement of North Dakota's state museum are meticulously uncovering something amazing: a nearly complete dinosaur, skin and all.
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Unlike almost every other dinosaur fossil ever found, the Edmontosaurus named Dakota, a duckbilled dinosaur unearthed in southwestern North Dakota in 2004, is covered by fossilized skin that is hard as iron. It's among just a few mummified dinosaurs in the world, say the researchers who are slowly freeing it from a 65-million-year-old rock tomb.

"This is the closest many people will ever get to seeing what large parts of a dinosaur actually looked like, in the flesh," said Phillip Manning, a paleontologist at Manchester University in England, a member of the international team researching Dakota.

"This is not the usual disjointed sentence or fragment of a word that the fossil records offer up as evidence of past life. This is a full chapter."

Animal tissue typically decomposes quickly after death. Researchers say Dakota must have been buried rapidly and in just the right environment for the texture of the skin to be preserved.

"The process of decay was overtaken by that of fossilization, preserving many of the soft-tissue structures," Manning said.

Tyler Lyson, a 25-year-old doctoral paleontology student at Yale University, discovered the dinosaur on his uncle's ranch in the Badlands in 1999. Weeks after he started to unearth the fossil in 2004, he knew he had found something special.

"Usually all we have is bones," Lyson said in a telephone interview. "In this special case, we're not just after the bones; we're after the whole carcass."

Researchers have used the world's largest CT scanner, operated by the Boeing Co. in California and used to examine space shuttle parts, to get a better look at what is encased in the rumpled mass of sandstone.

Stephen Begin, a Michigan consultant on the project, said this is the fifth dinosaur mummy ever found that is "of any significance."

"It may turn out to be one of the best mummies, because of the quality of the skin that we're finding and the extent of the skin that's on the specimen," he said Tuesday.

Begin said several other dinosaurs with fossilized skin have been unearthed around the world, but only a handful have enough skin to be of use for research and education and in most previous cases the skin was considered to be of lesser importance. "The goal was to get bones to put on display," he said.

Dakota was moved to the museum early last month and is currently surrounded by precariously perched desk lamps and a machine to suck up dust. State paleontologist John Hoganson, of the North Dakota Geological Survey, said it will take a year, maybe more, to uncover it.

Amy Sakariassen, part of the team working on the project, was toiling away with a brush whose bristles had been ground down to nubs.

"It really is wonderful to work on it," she said, as Begin used a sharp instrument to pick away tiny bits of rock and unveil a scale. "Nobody's seen that particular scale in 67 million years. It's quite thrilling."

Manning said his involvement has meant 18-hour days, seven-day weeks and "more work than I could have ever imagined. But I would not change a single second of the past few years."

Hoganson said the main part of the fossil is in two parts, weighing a total of nearly 5 tons.

"The skeleton itself is kind of curled up," he said. "The actual length would be about 30 feet, from about the tip of its tail to the tip of its nose."

The fossil has spawned both a children's book and an adult book, as well as National Geographic television programs. The National Geographic Society is funding much of the research.

"We are looking forward to seeing what emerges from the huge dinosaur body block now housed in North Dakota," said John Francis, a society vice president.

Many prehistoric fossils have been found in the western North Dakota Badlands where terrain has been heavily eroded over time by weather. Hoganson said other treasures likely are waiting to be unearthed.

"It's one of the few places in the world where you can actually see the boundary line where the dinosaurs became extinct, the time boundary," he said. "In the Badlands, this layer is exposed in certain places."

Lyson, who found the fossil, eventually hopes to send it on a worldwide tour and then bring it back to his hometown of Marmarth, where he is creating a museum. For now, workers at the North Dakota Heritage Center on the state Capitol grounds are getting part of it ready for display this summer.

 

pontifex

Lifer
Dec 5, 2000
43,804
46
91
Manning said his involvement has meant 18-hour days, seven-day weeks

is there a reason they need to work so much? it's not like it's going to get up and walk away, right?
 

spidey07

No Lifer
Aug 4, 2000
65,469
5
76
There was a good show on either discovery HD or national geographic HD.

They took it to the giant MRI that boeing has.
 

Queasy

Moderator<br>Console Gaming
Aug 24, 2001
31,796
2
0
Originally posted by: pontifex
Manning said his involvement has meant 18-hour days, seven-day weeks

is there a reason they need to work so much? it's not like it's going to get up and walk away, right?

If I remember correctly, once you start excavating something like this, you want to hurry up and get it out of the ground and treat it before exposure to the elements (even in a closed work house) can damage it.
 

Homerboy

Lifer
Mar 1, 2000
30,890
5,001
126
side note: Weird... the two messages from spidey and paulxcook came in my email notification together. It was spidey's name but paulxcook's post.
 

Gooberlx2

Lifer
May 4, 2001
15,381
6
91
Originally posted by: pontifex
Manning said his involvement has meant 18-hour days, seven-day weeks

is there a reason they need to work so much? it's not like it's going to get up and walk away, right?

It seems like their work basically consists eroding away the surrounding rock with brush bristles. I imagine if they want to have it ready anytime in the next decade they better have people working long and hard on it.

At the same time, I'm betting that solid funding (especially from sources like National Geographic) is relatively rare in that field, so they'd rather maintain a skeleton crew and keep more pay per person.
 
Feb 6, 2007
16,432
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The dinosaur mummy took its place among the Pantheon of monster animals, joining the vampire squid, the goblin shark, the tasmanian devil and zombie Jesus.
 

xboxist

Diamond Member
Jun 25, 2002
3,017
1
81
This is rather exciting. Basically a preserved dinosaur -- scales and all. Can't wait to see more images of it later on.