67-million-year-old dinosaur stays at North Dakota spot

BISMARCK, N.D. — Dakota the duck-billed dinosaur might have found permanent digs in Bismarck.

State Historical Society Director Merl Paaverud said officials have reached a $3 million deal to keep the rare mummified fossil on display at the North Dakota Heritage Center, where it will serve as a cornerstone for the facility’s $51 million expansion.

The deal means the state can pursue fundraising from private sources, Paaverud said, while the $3 million must be raised within four years “or the deal is off.” Paaverud said he’s optimistic.

The 67-million-year-old Edmontosaurus with fossilized skin was found in 1999 by high school student Tyler Lyson on his uncle’s ranch near Marmarth, in southwestern North Dakota. Lyson, who went on to earn a doctorate in paleontology from Yale University, is now a postdoctoral researcher at the Smithsonian.

Lyson said in April that the money received for the fossil will be used to establish a Marmarth Research Foundation endowment fund “to be used to further vertebrate paleontology.” Money would be used to “fund public digs, build up research collections, train students and further the advancement of paleontology,” he said.

Researchers have said Dakota is one of the more important dinosaur discoveries in recent times. It is one of only a few mummified dinosaurs in existence and may have the most and best-preserved skin, along with ligaments, tendons and possibly some internal organs. It has been the subject of a children’s book, an adult book and National Geographic television programs. It was featured at a 2009 dinosaur exhibit in Japan.

The dinosaur itself is enormous. Dakota’s body, fossilized into stone, weighs about 8,500 pounds, and two other portions, including a tail and an arm, bring the total to about 10,000 pounds.

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