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A fossilized Tyrannosaurus rex is still looking for a home after bidders failed to meet the minimum price Saturday at a Las Vegas auction.The female specimen contains roughly 170 bones, a little more than half of a full skeleton, making it the third most complete specimen ever to be discovered.
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In addition, “Samson” boasts an “undistorted and virtually complete skull, considered to be one of the most complete in existence,” according to Thomas Lundgren, the Co-Consulting Director of Natural History for Bonhams and Butterfields.
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The auctioneer had hoped bids would top $6 million for the T. rex dubbed "Samson." The highest bid at Saturday's auction at the Venetian hotel-casino was $3.7 million.
Lindgren said the owner had sought to sell the dinosaur as soon as possible, leaving potential bidders scrambling to quickly come up with the money.
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This 70-million- to- 75-million-year-old ammonite fossil was unearthed from the Bearpaw Formation, which reaches across Montana and into the Canadian provinces of Alberta and Saskatchewan.
Estimated bidding: $40,000 to $50,000
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