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T-rex in Singapore as experts decry ‘harmful’ auctions

Catherine Lai (AFP)
Singapore
Sun, October 30, 2022

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T-rex in Singapore as experts decry ‘harmful’ auctions Prehistoric creature: Visitors use their mobile phones to take pictures of the dinosaur skeleton of a Tyrannosaurus rex on display in Singapore on Friday. (AFP/Roslan Rahman)

D

inosaur fans got a glimpse of a Tyrannosaurus rex skeleton as it went on display in Singapore on Friday before an auction next month, as experts slammed the big-money bone trade as "harmful to science".

The 1,400-kilogram frame, composed of about 80 bones, will be the first T-rex skeleton auctioned in Asia, according to Christie's, which has not given an estimate for the lot.

Dubbed Shen, meaning godlike, it will be on display for three days before being shipped to Hong Kong to be sold in November.

"None of the 20 T-Rex that exist in the world are owned by either an Asian institution or an Asian collector," said Francis Belin, president of Christie's Asia Pacific.

"We really hope that Shen will find a new home among our Asian collectors here."

The adult dino, which stands 4.6 meters tall and 12 m long, is thought to be male. It was excavated from private land in the Hells Creek Formation in Montana, the US, in 2020.

"I've never seen a real-life fossil before [...] It makes me feel in awe because it's quite majestic," said Lauren Lim, 33, who went to view the exhibit.

'Bad news for science'

Shen -- which lived during the Cretaceous period about 67 million years ago -- is not the only dino auctioned in recent years.

In July, the first skeleton of a Gorgosaurus went under the hammer for US$6.1 million in New York, the US. Another T-rex, “Stan”, was sold for $31.8 million by Christie's in 2020.

But the trend for prehistoric auction lots has some experts concerned.

"It's a sad thing that dinosaurs are becoming collectible toys for the oligarch class, and I can only hope this fad ends soon," said Steve Brusatte, a paleontologist at the University of Edinburgh.

He said the trend was "bad news for science", and the remains belonged in museums.

Thomas Carr, a paleontologist from the US, described such sales as being "unquestionably harmful to science" even if the skeletons had been studied before being sold.

"A secure, permanent collection ensures that the observations that a scientist makes of a fossil can be tested and replicated -- and a commercially held fossil has no such assurance," Carr said.

Belin, of Christie's, said he hoped a public institution would buy Shen, and added that the whole skeleton had been fully researched, recorded in 3D and "all the elements of the skeleton will be made available for the public to research".

"We strongly hope that the new owner, whether it's an institution or private, will ensure that it's being seen by the public," Belin said.

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