Rare, 13.7" Dinosaur (Stegosaurus) Radius Bone - Wyoming

This is a 13.7" long Stegosaurus radius bone, collected from a private ranch (Red Canyon Ranch) in Bighorn County, Wyoming. This bone is well prepared and upon request we can have a custom metal display stand built for the specimen. If interested, please contact support@fossilera.com for a quote. Stegosaurus material can be hard to come by, especially material of this quality!

Restoration on this specimen is relatively minimal, primarily found in the form of gap fill restoration within repaired cracks. The notable repaired cracks with gap fill can be found through the diaphysis.

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.


About The Morrison Formation

Located in the midwestern United States, the Late Jurassic-aged Morrison Formation is an incredibly large and fossiliferous formation that dates back to about 156 to 147 million years old. Named after the small town of Morrison, Colorado, the formation was discovered in 1877, and quickly became the center of one of the biggest rivalries in historical paleontology.

19th century paleontologists Othniel Charles Marsh and Edward Drinker Cope spent 15 years making outstanding strides in the discovery of fossils all throughout the American Midwest, but also resorted to unsavory methods in attempts to discredit or ruin the other's work and reputation, including destruction of specimens.

The total area of the formation is roughly 600,000 square miles, but much of that is inaccessible, deeply buried under prairie land and eroded during the formation of the Rocky Mountains. Even so, many outcroppings across the Front Range and upper Midwest allow paleontologists access to a wealth of information from Late Jurassic North America.

Dinosaurs from the region include large allosaurid dinosaurs, such as the eponymous Allosaurus and its larger relative Saurophaganax. Both exceeded 30 feet in length, making them some of the largest carnivores of their time. They competed with the similarly large megalosaurid Torvosaurus, and the somewhat smaller horned ceratosaurid, Ceratosaurus. On the smaller end of the theropod family tree was the raptor-like Ornitholestes.

For herbivores, Stegosaurus guarded their herds with huge, intimidating backplates and formidable tail spikes. Small, early ankylosaurs like Gargoyleosaurus would have fed on the forested understory, smaller in size than the 30+ foot giant Stegosaurids.

However, the Morrison Formation's main attraction were the giant sauropod dinosaurs, some of the most colossal of dinosaurs and largest land animals of all time. Diplodocus, Camarasaurus, Apatosaurus, Brontosaurus, Brachiosaurus, Barosaurus, and Supersaurus all count themselves among these long-necked titans. None of these herbivores would have been less than 50 feet in length at adult size: the largest of their number would have exceeded 100-115 feet in length, and over 40 tons. For so many sauropods to have lived in roughly the same place and time, they all likely developed different feeding and living strategies to minimize competition. Their massive sizes and herds would have defended them well from any of the numerous predators of the Morrison.
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DETAILS
SPECIES
Stegosaurus sp.
LOCATION
Red Canyon Ranch, Near Shell, Bighorn County, Wyoming
FORMATION
Morrison Formation
SIZE
Bone: 13.7 x 3.4"
CATEGORY
SUB CATEGORY
ITEM
#342160
GUARANTEE
We guarantee the authenticity of all of our specimens.