Thursday, July 16, 2026

‘One other dinosaur has entered the luxurious collectibles market’: Gus the T. rex simply bought for $50 million. Here is what its loss means to science.


On July 14, 2026, “Gus,” some of the full specimens of Tyrannosaurus rex, went to an as but unidentified purchaser for US$50.1 million. This public sale at Sotheby’s set a file for Most worthy fossil ever bought. One other dinosaur has entered the luxurious collectibles market, a reminder that even Earth’s deepest historical past may be bought to the best bidder.

To paleontologists like me, nevertheless, a fossil like “Gus” — excavated from the Hell Creek Formation in South Dakota over three years beginning in 2021 by industrial collector Thomas Heitkamp and his crew — is just not a trophy or a murals. It’s an irreplaceable scientific archive. Fossils protect proof of evolution, extinction, progress, illness, harm and historical ecosystems. They’re finite, nonsubstitutable information of life’s historical past on Earth.

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