Description:
This is the well-preserved skull of an armored dinosaur known as
Pinacosaurus grangeri from the famous Bayan Mandahu location in
the Gobi that was initially discovered by Charles Gilmore in 1933.
Gilmore was a member of the famous Central Asiatic Expeditions to
the Gobi led by Roy Chapman Andrews in the 1920’s. Bayn Dzak
is the most famous of all locations, and was termed the Flaming
Cliffs by Andrews. Gilmore originally placed the badly crushed skull
and scattered other material he found in the Nodosauridae, but Pinacosaurus
was subsequently found to be a member of the Ankylosauridae. At
5 meters in overall length, Pinacosaurus was a medium-sized ankylosaur
which shared in common with Saichania a most unusual trait: the
possession of thin curved bones similar to the respiratory turbinal
bones of mammals. They
are the only reptiles positively known to possess these structures
that were thought to warm, filter, and moisten incoming air.
While
most ankylosaurs are thought to have been solitary animals, a discovery
of several juvenile specimens announced by a joint Chinese-Canadian
expedition to the Gobi in 1988 suggested that the sheep-sized babies
might have been smothered during a sandstorm. While several specimens
are known that range in size from adult to juvenile, very little
well-preserved adult cranial material is known, making this a most
exceptional specimen of undoubted museum quality.
Although
skeletal bones of Pinacosaurus are relatively common at the site,
this is one of only two known adult skulls of diagnostic quality,
and is a most majestic and valuable specimen. The Djadokhta Formation
of Mongolia from which the specimen comes yielded the first undoubted
dinosaur eggs, Protoceratops, Velociraptor and many other theropods.
In addition, many examples of turtles, crocodiles, lizards and mammals
have been discovered.
The
specimen has no restoration and is essentially unprepared. Depending
on preference, it could benefit by professional cleaning, and such
work can be arranged to be done by one of the very best, if you
lack access to a professional preparator with the requisite skills
and equipment.
The
pictures below provide many perspectives (or lighting) of this unique
Cretaceous dinosaur fossil.
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