LiveAuctionTalk com Highlights T-Rex Skull in its Weekly Free Article

Released on = August 14, 2007, 12:51 pm

Press Release Author = Rosemary McKittrick

Industry = Internet & Online

Press Release Summary = Rosemary McKittrick's column is one of the web's premier
online resources for up-to-date art and antique information. Visit the site and
sign up for a free weekly subscription.

Press Release Body = Aug. 14, 2007--One of my favorite things to do as a kid was to
visit the dinosaur collection at the Carnegie Museum of Pittsburgh. Staring up at
the huge teeth, mighty jaws and giant head of the Tyrannosaurus Rex, I was certain
the beast could have easily eaten me on the spot.

I also pictured the T. rex charging migrating herds of smaller dinosaurs in his
territory and picking off their weak, young and sick. Even today the childhood
recollections are still clear.

The common thinking nowadays is that dinosaurs were slow-moving, dull-witted
prehistoric versions of today's reptiles. Most scientists agree they were reptiles.


Some dinosaurs were as small as roosters. Others were as big as buildings. Some
were slow like turtles. Others were as fast as horses. Even in brainpower there
were tremendous differences among dinosaurs.

The thing that makes T. rex standout is that it was one of the last, largest and
strongest of all the predatory dinosaurs. It could easily have stared inside my
bedroom window and plucked me out of my childhood bed with its birdlike claws.

No surprise all the interest today in this lumbering beast. The T. rex has been
pictured and brought to life in magazines, movies and dime-store novels for eons.

Dinosaurs like T. rex teach us what life was like on the earth millions of years
ago. They're important links in the chain of history. Perhaps, they're even the
source of our ancient legends about mythical beasts.

That's why when the skull of an extremely rare Tyrannosaurid comes up for sale on
the auction block it stirs up keen interest.

That's what happened on March 25, 2007, when a T. rex skull sold at I. M. Chait
Gallery in an auction held simultaneously in Beverly Hills and New York City.

The prepped and mounted 32-inch-long tyrannosaurus skull sold to an anonymous
California collector for $276,000.

Read the entire article at www.LiveAuctionTalk.com.

RSS: www.liveauctiontalk.com/rss/lat.rss.



Web Site = http://www.LiveAuctionTalk.com

Contact Details = info@liveauctiontalk.com
505-989-7210

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