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Sue is one of the largest, most extensive, and best-preserved T-Rex ever found. It was discovered in 1990 and was named after its discoverer, Sue Hendrickson. Today, Sue can be found at the Field ...
A University of Regina research team has made discoveries about how dinosaurs may have healed from injuries when they examined the preserved blood vessel structures inside a rib bone from Scotty, the ...
As the Field Museum celebrates 25 years since the debut of Sue, here’s a look back at how the T. rex made its way from the Black Hills of South Dakota to Chicago.
Twenty-five years ago, Sue the T. rex made its debut at the Field Museum, with more than 10,000 people coming to see the 67-million-year-old fossil that has become a Chicago icon.
Blood vessel structures found preserved in a famous T rex fossil are helping scientists understand how dinosaurs healed from injuries.. A study published recently in the journal Scientific Reports ...
The Field Museum’s Sue the T. rex, a 67-million-year-old fossil of a Tyrannosaurus rex, has drawn thousands of visitors since it was first displayed to the public 25 years ago on May 17, 2000.