The Dinosaur Fossil Wars
Across the American West, legal battles over dinosaur fossils are on the rise as amateur prospectors make major finds
- By Donovan Webster
- Photographs by Aaron Huey
- Smithsonian magazine, April 2009, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 7)
In 2001, as the excavation of Tinker headed toward completion, the team made another remarkable discovery: evidence of two additional T. rex skeletons on the site. By that point, a children's museum in the Midwest had indicated its willingness to pay up to $8.5 million for Tinker. During the prospective purchaser's pre-transaction research, however, a massive legal hiccup was uncovered—one that Frithiof and his lawyers would later insist had been an honest mistake.
Tinker, as it turned out, had been found not from local rancher Gary Gilbert's land but from adjacent property owned by Harding County, South Dakota. In November 2000, Frithiof, he says, with an eye to future excavations, had leased the parcel from the county; the agreement stipulated that the county would get 10 percent of the sale price for any fossils uncovered there. Now, in August 2004, Harding County filed a civil lawsuit in Federal District Court against Frithiof and his partners alleging fraud, trespass and conspiracy.
Frithiof's world caved in. After devoting years to Tinker, the prospector was suddenly in danger of going to jail for his efforts. "This whole experience has been a disaster," he says. "[With] all the lawyers' fees, not to mention the disruption of my life, it's cost me a fortune. And it's been very hard on my family. You gotta remember, I've never been in trouble in my life. Not even a traffic ticket." The disputed dinosaur, according to Frithiof's attorney Joe Ellingson, "wrecked my client's life."
Moreover, the fossil was consigned to limbo. As a result of byzantine twists in the litigation, Tinker's bones would soon be placed under another lawyer's supervision, stored in plastic tubs at an undisclosed location in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania—1,400 miles from the excavation site.
Across the American West and Great Plains, an intensifying conflict over the excavation of fossils—everything from a five-inch shark's tooth, which might sell for $50, to Frithiof's spectacular T. rex—has pitted amateur excavators against both the federal government and scientists. Scores, perhaps thousands, of prospectors—some operating as poachers on federally protected land—are conducting digs across hundreds of thousands of square miles from the Dakotas to Texas, Utah, Wyoming and Montana.
"In terms of digging for fossils, there are a lot more people" than there used to be, says Matthew Carrano, curator of dinosauria at the Smithsonian Museum of Natural History. "Twenty years ago, if you ran into a private or commercial fossil prospector in the field, it was one person or a couple of people. Now, you go to good fossil locations in, say, Wyoming, and you find quarrying operations with maybe 20 people working, and doing a professional job of excavating fossils."
Fueling the frenzy is skyrocketing market demand, as fossils, long relegated to the dusty realm of museum shelves, have entered the glitzy spheres of home décor and art. "There have always been private fossil collectors," says David Herskowitz of Heritage Auction Galleries in Dallas. "The difference is, historically, a private fossil collector was wealthy. But today, interest in fossils has grabbed the attention of a broad swath of the population. That means a lot more people are collecting."
Who's buying these days? Just about anyone. With prices to suit virtually any budget, one can own an ancient remnant of life on earth: a botanical fossil, such as a fern, may cost as little as $20; a fossil snail, perhaps, may well go for $400.
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Comments (34)
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Some elitist archeologists whom are usually university associated so-called experts believe that no one else should possess fossils, artifacts and dino bones, except for them of course. They seek to make it illegal for anyone but them to collect and possess them, except for them. These selfish self important glory seeking experts lock their finds away in college basements in drawers where only they can see and touch and visit their precious collected artifacts that only they are allowed to have access to. These special chosen ones rob us all of our rights to study and learn. Do not allow these greedy hoarders to cause others of exactly what they are doing. They are like Gollum curled up in the corner with their "PRECIOUS"!!!
Posted by MyPrecious on August 25,2012 | 07:10 AM
In my experience more artifacts are lost due to construction than any other cause. Someone building a building has loader operators working full speed ahead and could care less about what they destroy in the process of excavation. Private bone hunters do a lot more good than they do harm and everyone should realize that. So many of the precious artifacts they have found would have probably been destroyed at some point in time during excavations. With the exception of human remains, all legal digs are fair game. The 'professionals' have no dibs on anything. As a matter of fact, I suspect most of the black market wares were dug by these professionals who were out to make a buck from the beginning. I know of a case in point, personally. I do not, however, believe anyone has the right to dig up, own or disturb any human remains. What if we dug up your grandmother? From Egypt to the Native Americans, no one has the right to disturb these remains. Period. So, professionals who do this for a living are brazen and calloused and should have the heavy hand of the law come down on them for a change.
Posted by Samuel Martin on August 7,2012 | 02:14 PM
as usual more gov. regs. to muck up our lives! God forbid a private citizen might find something lost for millions of years and be allowed to keep it.I myself have found a Mossasaur skull in texas! in the middle of nowhere! I now know the skull is not on the private land i had permission to dig on.It took me two years to dig it up! i now find out i can be jailed for digging it! Well it will stay were i left it. Very doubtful it will ever be found again! Most likely it will be destroyed by Windmill construction. i guess the "gov." knows best. Better we all sit on the couch get fat and watch "reality" tv. to lazy to get out and do anything ourselves! too much gov. think about that when u vote for a Dem.
Posted by yankee on February 5,2012 | 01:44 PM
I have a dinosaur fossil that my uncle had given to me when I was a kid. I am looking for information on what the different options are for me to do with it.
Posted by Jen on February 3,2012 | 03:10 PM
i found a bone a few years ago and really need to no if its a dino bone.i found it near a creek bed.in georgia in the okfanokee swamp.its on about 12 inches long and curved.its looks like rib bone of some type.the bone is really fossilize.so if any body can help me let me no.
Posted by stil_bill on December 27,2011 | 03:23 PM
my husband FOUND AN SKELETON OF DINOSAUR . WE REALLY APPRECIATE IF YOU COULD GUIDE US TO FINE CUSTOMER or give us some advice for selling it. ITS NOT JUST TOOTH OR SKIN ITS A REAL TYREX AROUND 1.5 METER.
thanks
Posted by sogand on August 9,2011 | 03:31 AM
I know a nice solution. Fossil dealers and paleontologists could explore together. If the fossil is not scientifically signifigant, it gets put up for sale. If it is signifigant, it goes to a museum and a cast is made, which is produced and sold.
Posted by Not Telling on March 20,2011 | 06:21 AM
Private Ownership of fossils should not be banned, and if it is, fossils obtained before the ban should not be confiscated.
Posted by Not Telling on March 17,2011 | 03:30 AM
Can anyone help me I wanted to no where I can bring a fossil/tooth to get it check out and maybe sale it in the bay area. I bought a box of quartz from a old time gold miner and found a piece in there that looks like a fossil or mybe a dinosaur tooth thanks
Posted by matt on October 16,2010 | 08:09 AM
I also found some dinosaur skin not far from the previsous bones in a block of sandstone.
check it out at:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lmUs4z88ruI
There is no way I will show it to a paleontologist. I'd rather have a amateur come dig it up. The dino skin piece that I have has been touched by many children who are in awe. That doesn't happen in museums. If anybody is going to be famous for this find, it isn't going to be a so called professional.
Posted by SpectateSwamp on December 25,2009 | 10:22 AM
I videoed some dino bones in a block of stone a few years back. I returned the next year to video what new fossils were exposed. The old ones were long gone. I should have exposed the under layers. Rock in areas that erode should be removed if at all possible.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uYZBixDl1gc
View the video
Posted by Spectate Swamp on October 10,2009 | 09:52 PM
i need to know how archiologists know how old bones and fossils are.
Posted by anna holcombe on September 3,2009 | 10:52 AM
What's the current status of this case?
Posted by Sue Misner on July 20,2009 | 02:11 PM
I do not have a problem with private citizens finding, claiming, exposing, digging and removing (with land owner's permission, otherwise it's theft) any fossil they find. Even if they sell it, or put it up for auction. Isn't that what a Paleontologist does when he finds a fossil? OK, call it grant money, call it donating it to a museum (who buy and sell fossils routinely) but the Paleontologist (not to mention Archeologists and Primatologists) are not above paying their mortgage on sold artifacts.
Posted by Christopher Wood on June 2,2009 | 12:34 AM
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