Sue's back on her feet...

Sixty-five million years after she stalked the Earth, a Tyrannosaurus rex named Sue was on her feet again, crouched with her tail stretched out behind her.

Hundreds of children and onlookers who packed into the main hall of the Field Museum of Natural History stared in awe today as a curtain dropped to reveal the largest, most complete and best-preserved T. rex skeleton ever discovered.

``It was a grand entrance,'' Mayor Richard Daley said after a chamber orchestra played the specially commissioned ``Tyrannosaurus Sue: A Cretaceous Concerto'' by composer Bruce Adolphe.

The 41-foot-long skeleton - named for Sue Hendrickson, the fossil hunter who found it in 1990 - is one of the most talked about and debated fossil finds in history.

Sue cost the museum .36 million at an auction that had been delayed for years by a legal battle with the federal government, the Sioux Indian tribe and a rancher all claiming ownership.

Federal agents seized the bones in 1992, claiming the fossil hunters failed to get a federal permit to dig for them on the rancher's land located inside the Cheyenne River Indian Reservation. After a million investigation, the government found no crime but prosecuted Hendrick's partner Peter Larson on currency violation charges involving overseas fossil sales.

A court eventually declared the rancher the fossil's rightful owner, and Sue was auctioned in 1997. After a 10-minute bidding frenzy, the Field Museum bought it for .36 million, criticized as an outrageous sum.

To cover Sue's cost, the Field took on McDonald's and Disney as partners. Both get exclusive rights to casts of Sue's bones. ``Sue has waited for this for a long time,'' Hendrickson said.

By any measure, the skeleton is big - 13 feet tall at the hips, 41 feet long and teeth as long as a human forearm.

The museum is displaying ``her'' (scientists aren't sure whether Sue was male or female) in the main hall. A lightweight cast replaces the one-ton skull on the skeleton because that real one is too heavy. It's displayed in a nearby case.

``I thought it was going to be bigger, but it is very complete,'' said Jared Dickerson, a seventh-grader who won a trivia contest to get an invitation to the unveiling. ``The coolest thing is knowing how fast and big it was. And I heard it could eat a whole human in two bites.''

Visit Sue at the Field Museum in Chicago~* at http://www.fieldmuseum.org/





*** Scientists find dinosaur-like animal with feathers
The theory that birds are descended from dinosaurs gained more credence Tuesday when paleontologists announced the discovery of fossils of two species with both distinctive feathers and dinosaur features. The fossils, unearthed in the Liaoning province of China, date back more than 120 million years and conclusively prove the hotly contested theory that dinosaurs are the direct ancestors of birds, said Philip Currie, curator of dinosaurs at the Royal Tyrrell Museum of Paleontology in Canada. A team of scientists worked to identify the fossils as two separate species and their findings were published in National Geographic magazine and the journal Nature.

Scientists have discovered the world's largest group of dinosaur footprints at a site near Sucre, Bolivia, a Swiss paleontologist who has been studying the area said, local media reported Saturday. Scientists found footprints up to 3 feet long in the area, which includes prints of several dinosaur species, making it one of the rarest finds in the world. "There is no comparable site in the world," said Swiss paleontologist Christian Meyer. Meyer's team studied the site for the last two months, after Bolivian scientists found it two years ago, and recently concluded it is the largest site known to exist in the world. The site covers an area of 269,100 square feet, Meyer said.



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