The commercial sale of dinosaur fossils at private auctions has sparked intense debate between wealthy collectors and the scientific community. While the private fossil trade is legal in certain countries under specific conditions, paleontologists warn that commercialization removes invaluable specimens from public trust and scientific study. High market prices incentivize excavation for profit, often resulting in the loss of crucial contextual data and preventing researchers from accessing important evolutionary evidence.
- Private auctions of dinosaur bones have reached multimillion-dollar prices, often pricing out public museums and academic institutions.
- In countries like the United States, fossils discovered on private land belong to the landowner and can be legally sold on the open market.
- Many nations, including Mongolia, Brazil, and China, declare all fossils to be state property and strictly prohibit their export.
- Scientists express concern that commercial excavation prioritizing aesthetics can destroy crucial geological context needed for dating and analysis.
- The high financial value of fossils has contributed to a rise in illegal poaching and smuggling across international borders.
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THE BONE RUSH: https://bloom.bg/4fcyevG
Dinosaurs have become an asset class for billionaires. And the market is about as orderly and genteel as a starving T. rex.