Canada Unveils ‘Dinosaur Mummy’ Found With Skin And Gut Contents Intact
“We don’t just have a skeleton. We have a dinosaur as it would have been.”
After
110-million years encased in stone, an impeccably preserved,
dragon-like dinosaur has been unveiled by paleontologists in Canada and
it’s unlike anything they’ve seen before.
The remains of an armor-plated nodosaur, a 3,000-pound plant-eating horned creature, went on display in Alberta on Friday after its accidental discovery by miners nearly six years ago, National Geographic reported.
“We
don’t just have a skeleton,” Caleb Brown, a postdoctoral researcher at
the Royal Tyrrell Museum of Paleontology where the fossil went on
display, told the magazine. “We have a dinosaur as it would have been.”
Researchers
say the fossil is remarkable, with it being a never-before-seen species
of nodosaur, as well as the oldest dinosaur ever found in Alberta. It’s
preserved skin and gut contents are also providing invaluable clues on
these extinct creatures.
“I’ve
been calling this one the Rosetta Stone for armor,” Donald Henderson,
curator of dinosaurs at the Royal Tyrrell Museum, told National
Geographic.
“It’s basically a dinosaur mummy ― it really is exceptional,” Don Brinkman, director of preservation and research, also told The New York Times.
For
the last five years, researchers have spent more than 7,000 hours
chiseling away at the fossil’s surrounding rock to expose the incredible
creature.
The
researchers have had their share of ups and downs, with the fossil
breaking into pieces upon its removal from Alberta’s Millennium Mine in
2011.
The 15,000-pound, plaster-covered block it was encased in is seen shattering during a video uploaded to YouTube by Suncor Energy, which owns the mine.
“One
of the good things about this, believe it or not, is because it’s in
smaller pieces it will make preparation go a little faster,” Darren
Tanke, a paleo technician with the Royal Tyrrell Museum, says in the
video.
“This
is restorable. Everything broke cleanly and in big pieces,” he adds.
“It’s unfortunate that this happened but this is restorable.”
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