Largest stegosaurus skeleton found auctioned for record $59.8m in New York

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epa11470294 A Sotheby's handler stands near the 150-million-year-old skeleton of a stegosaurus named 'Apex', on display at Sotheby's auction house in New York, New York, USA, 10 July 2024. 'Apex', measuring 11 feet tall and over 20 feet long, is the most complete and best preserved large-scale Stegosaurus specimen ever discovered. The fossil is set to be the main piece of Sotheby's Live Natural History Auction on 17 July, carrying an estimate of four to six million US dollars.  EPA-EFE/SARAH YENESEL

The 150-million-year-old skeleton of a stegosaurus named Apex, seen on display at Sotheby's auction house in New York.

PHOTO: EPA-EFE

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NEW YORK - The largest stegosaurus skeleton found, nicknamed Apex, sold for a record breaking US$44.6 million (S$59.8 million) at auction in New York on July 17, Sotheby’s said.

Estimated to be 150 million years old, Apex is said to be “among the most complete skeletons ever found”, according to the auction house.

It measures 11 feet (3.35m) tall and 27 feet (8.23m) long and counts 254 fossil bone elements of an approximate total of 319.

The previous auction record of US$31.8 million for a dinosaur skeleton was set in 2020 for a Tyrannosaurus Rex nicknamed Stan.

Sotheby’s had expected Apex to fetch between US$4 million and US$6 million, but the price quickly skyrocketed as telephone bidders deluged the sale, prompting gasps and clapping in the auction room.

After the record-breaking sale, the auctioneer asked her colleague Cassandra Hatton, Sotheby’s global head of science, “Do you need a cigarette?”

Apex was discovered in May 2022 on the private land of paleontologist Jason Cooper.

Signs of arthritis on the skeleton indicated that the dinosaur lived to an advanced age, according to Sotheby’s website. 

The auction house says it has collaborated with Mr Cooper to “document the entire process, from discovery and excavation to restoration, preparation and mounting”, in order to guarantee the “highest standards and transparency”.

In 2022, Christie’s auction house had to

withdraw a T-rex skeleton

a few days before auction in Hong Kong, due to doubts about its authenticity.

July 17’s auction follows an increasing trend for the sale of dinosaur remains.

Stegosaurus skeletons are already on display around the world, but according to Sotheby’s, Apex is 30 per cent larger than Sophie, the most complete stegosaurus on public display to date, which is housed in the Natural History Museum in London. AFP

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