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TUE · 2026-07-14 · 15:31 GMTBRIEF NSR-2026-0714-92983
News/‘Gus’ the T. rex fetches record US$50.1 /T rex fossil ‘Gus’ sells for $50.1m at New York auction, set…
NSR-2026-0714-92983News Report·EN·Human Interest

T rex fossil ‘Gus’ sells for $50.1m at New York auction, setting new record

A Tyrannosaurus rex fossil nicknamed Gus sold for $50.1 million at Sotheby's in New York, setting a new record for a dinosaur fossil at auction. The skeleton, excavated in South Dakota between 2021 and 2023, is considered one of the largest and most complete T-rex specimens ever found.

Edward Helmore in New YorkThe Guardian - World NewsFiled 2026-07-14 · 15:31 GMTLean · Center-LeftRead · 3 min
T rex fossil ‘Gus’ sells for $50.1m at New York auction, setting new record
The Guardian - World NewsFIG 01
Reading time
3min
Word count
663words
Sources cited
2cited
Entities identified
8entities
Quality score
100%
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Briefing Summary

AI-generated
NEWSAR · AI

A Tyrannosaurus rex fossil nicknamed Gus sold for $50.1 million at Sotheby's in New York, setting a new record for a dinosaur fossil at auction. The skeleton, excavated in South Dakota between 2021 and 2023, is considered one of the largest and most complete T-rex specimens ever found. The sale price significantly exceeded its pre-sale estimate of $20 million to $30 million. While the sale is legal, some paleontologists expressed concern that such high prices could limit scientific research by placing fossils out of reach for academic institutions. Gus, estimated to be 67 million years old, was presented as an exhibition-ready mounted skeleton.

Confidence 0.90Sources 2Claims 5Entities 8
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Article analysis

Model · rule-based
Framing
Human Interest
Economic Impact
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0.80 / 1.00
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Sources cited
2
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FewMany
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Key claims

5 extracted
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Gus is believed to be 67 million years old and stands 3.8 meters (12.5ft) tall.

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The skeleton was excavated on a ranch in Harding county, South Dakota, by Theropoda Expeditions.

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The sale set a new record for the most valuable dinosaur fossil sold at auction.

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T-Rex fossil 'Gus' sold for $50.1 million at Sotheby's auction in New York.

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Palaeontologists expressed concerns that selling the fossil to private hands could limit research.

quotepalaeontologists
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Full report

3 min read · 663 words
A vast, fossilized Tyrannosaurus rex nicknamed Gus sold at Sotheby’s in New York on Tuesday for $50.1m with fees (£37.4m) to a phone bidder – making it the most valuable dinosaur fossil sold at auction.It also sold well above a pre-sale estimate of $20m to $30m (£15m to £22.4m).The skeleton, judged to be one of the largest and most complete ever unearthed, was excavated on a ranch in Harding County, South Dakota, by the commercial fossil outfit Theropoda Expeditions.Gus – which takes its name from Gary “Gus” Licking, owner of the land where the skeleton was discovered and excavated between 2021 and 2023 – had been the subject of scientific debate in the days leading up to the auction over claims that selling it into private hands could limit palaeontological research.With its impressive dagger-like teeth and behemoth size, and its being “mounted in a predatory pose”, Gus is believed to be 67m years old.It stands at 3.8 metres (12.5ft) tall and has been an attraction at the auction house’s new headquarters in New York.The skeleton’s head is so large and heavy that it is not actually mounted on Gus’s skeleton. It instead has been sitting in the lobby of Sotheby’s Breuer building as a stark reminder that brutalist architecture is no match for the brutalism of a T-Rex bite which Sotheby’s described as “huge teeth displayed within the gaping jaws.”A reproduction head is fitted on the skeleton itself.In Sotheby’s sale prospectus, the auction house said it was listing Gus as a “monumental item” that would, “in our opinion, require special handling or shipping services due to size or other physical considerations”.Gus – lot 20 in Tuesday’s auction – was presented by Sotheby’s as “an outstanding exhibition-ready mounted skeleton”. Beside its height, the auction house listed a body length of approximately 38ft, a skull length of 54in and a femur length of 50.39in. That cemented “Gus” as “one of the largest T rex ever found,” Sotheby’s said.The auctioneer said the skeleton contained 183 fossil bone elements, plus 30 of the 32 rarely found – much less mounted – gastralia (belly ribs). Those figures make Gus approximately 61% complete by bone count, 75 to 80% complete in terms of bone mass – while having an “exceptionally preserved skull” that includes all six dentitions.The skeleton also reveals some aspects of the life Gus lived on the hills of South Dakota, including a number of pathologies. Gus shows “signs of tyrannosaurid bite marks to the skull bones and right dentary, as well as to several post-cranial elements, all sustained by either combat or postmortem scavenging, in addition to injuries which occurred during the life of the individual, with fractured and healed bones discernible in several ribs and gastralia”.The sale beats the previous record for a dinosaur fossil at auction. A stegosaurus called Apex held the record as of Tuesday, having sold at a Sotheby’s auction in 2024 for $44.6m.Prior to auction, palaeontologists worried that sales like Gus could damage their studies by placing dinosaur skeletons out of the reach of academic institutions.“The current trend towards dinosaur fossils being marketed and sold like rare artworks at vast prices by auction houses is very concerning, as is the idea of buying dinosaur fossils as a status symbol or a commodity,” professor Richard Butler, a vertebrate palaeontolgist at England’s University of Birmingham, told the Guardian.“A fossil not in a recognised museum collection cannot be studied and is therefore lost to research. Fossils have been bought and sold for hundreds of years, but prices are increasingly out of the reach of museums, much to the detriment of science.”Professor Stephen Brusatte, of the University of Edinburgh in Scotland, agreed. “As this dinosaur was found in the USA, and in America you can do what you want with what you find on your land, the auction looks to be legal,” he said. “But as a scientist, it still concerns me.”In some countries, such as Brazil or Mongolia, all fossils belong to the state.
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Entities

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Keywords & salience

8 terms
tyrannosaurus rex
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fossil auction
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sotheby's
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dinosaur fossil
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record sale
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palaeontological research
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complete skeleton
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south dakota
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