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In this photo provided by the University
of Wyoming, John Bennit(L) and Jim Gordon, of Treibold Paleontology Inc.,
dismantle a 22.5-meter fossil display of an Apatosaurus at the University of
Wyoming Geological Museum in March 2007, in Laramie, Wyo. (AP Photo)
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BEIJING, March 22(Xinhuanet) -- In a makeover of
extraordinary proportions, U.S. scientists have dismantled a 22.5-meter-long
sauropod dinosaur that roamed Wyoming 150 million years ago and will rebuild it
to reflect the latest paleontological research findings.
The fossil display of the plant-eating Apatosaurus that
has dominated the University of Wyoming Geological Museum in Laramie for about
45 years will be worked on for a year and then returned to the museum in 2008,
according to Brent Breithaupt, director of the UW museum.
"It's basically like extreme home makeover, only this
is extreme dinosaur makeover," Breithaupt said Wednesday. "Everything from the
tip of its nose to the tip of its tail."
The Apatosaurus fossil is one of only six on display
in the world, he said.
The UW fossil display is about 60 percent actual
bone, which were unearthed in the early 1900s 70 miles north of Laramie, with
the rest of the display cast from molds. The display was assembled in 1960 by UW
professor Samuel H. Knight, who died in 1975.
"We will be able to add some of the dinosaur's bones
that professor Knight didn't have at the time to improve the display's looks,
such as posing it with its tail in the air instead of dragging on the ground,"
Breithaupt said.
Most of the fossil was dismantled this month by
experts from Treibold Paleontology Inc., a firm from Woodland Park, Colo., with
expertise in casting skeletons and fossil mounting.
However, the skeleton's large hip bones,
which weigh about a ton, were not dismantled because they are too heavy to lower
from their perches, Breithaupt said. Those bones will be left in place and worked
on in the museum.
(Agencies)