Five Articulated Stegosaurus Vertebrae On Stands - Colorado

Stegosaurus, despite its popularity is one of the rarest dinosaurs in the Morrison Formation with only a handful of skeletons being found. These five, articulated vertebrae were collected from a private quarry East of Dinosaur, CO several decades ago, just recently prepared and individually mounted. Isolated vertebrae of Stegosaurus are rare enough, but to get a string of five in a row associated is a truly rare find.

These vertebrae would have come from the neck of the animal. The largest one is approximately 6 1/2 inches tall (not including the stand) and the smallest is 5.8 inches tall. There were preserved in a hard sandstone layer, so they are remarkably well preserved, and required very little restoration, other than some small gap fills in the cracks. This would be a great display piece for a museum or public institution.

Mounted skeleton of a Stegosaurus in the Carnegie Museum of Natural History. Creative Commons License
Mounted skeleton of a Stegosaurus in the Carnegie Museum of Natural History. Creative Commons License


Stegosaurus is one of the most recognizable dinosaurs in the world due to its distinctive tail spikes and plates along its back. So far, 3 species have been described from the Upper Morrison Formation, and it has been in the news quite a bit lately due to "Sophie" the Stegosaurus at the London Natural History Museum. Stegosaurus is the state fossil of Colorado.

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DETAILS
SPECIES
Stegosaurus
LOCATION
Private Quarry, East of Dinosaur, Colorado
FORMATION
Lower Morrison Formation
SIZE
Largest vert 6 1/2" tall
CATEGORY
SUB CATEGORY
ITEM
#28195
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