Stolen Dinosaur Fossils
Ed Conrad (edconrad@prolog.net)
14 Dec 1996 12:57:23 GMT
bmw@uclink2.berkeley.edu (Ben Waggoner) wrote:
>This just came in over the wire, from the PaleoNet listserver. It was
>originally posted by D. M. Unwin <Dave.Unwin@Bristol.ac.uk>, who grants
>his permission to pass this message to colleagues and copy it to other
>listservers. Any help that anyone can give will, I am sure, be much
>appreciated. Thank you.
>--- Forwarded Message ---
>Dinosaur skulls stolen from Paleontological Institute, Moscow
>In August 1996 remains of five dinosaurs including part of the skull and a
>lower jaw of Tarbosaurus and three skulls of Protoceratops were found to
>have disappeared (believed stolen) from the fossil repository of the
>Palaeontological Institute, Russian Academy of Sciences, Moscow. These
>remains are currently valued at $11,000.
>Details of the stolen items are as follows:
>PIN 551/2. Lower jaw of holotype of Tarbosaurus efremovi.
>Maleev 1974. Gigantic carnosaurs of the family Tyrannosauridae. Fauna and
>Biostratigraphy of the Mesozoic and Cenozoic of Mongolia. Transactions of
>the Joint Soviet-Mongolian Paleontological Expedition, 1, 132-191. Figure
>14, p. 149.
>PIN 551/3. Maxilla with teeth of Tarbosaurus efremovi.
>Maleev 1974. Gigantic carnosaurs of the family Tyrannosauridae. Fauna and
>Biostratigraphy of the Mesozoic and Cenozoic of Mongolia. Transactions of
>the Joint Soviet-Mongolian Paleontological Expedition, 1, 132-191. Figure
>1, p. 140; Figure 4, p. 142; Figure 1, Plate 2.
>PIN 3142/1. Skull (syntype) of Breviceratops kozlowskii.
>Kurzanov, S. 1990. A new Late Cretaceous protoceratopsid genus from
>Mongolia. Palaeontological Journal, 24, 91-97 (English version 85-91),
>figure 1, pg. 94,
>PIN NN 3147/7. Undescribed skull of Protoceratops.
>PIN NN 3148/8. Undescribed skull of Protoceratops.
>Further background details have been published in the lead news item of
>Nature, 12 December 1996, vol. 384, p. 499.
>We have three requests:
>(1) If anyone has or obtains details as to the current whereabouts of
>these specimens would they please report this to their local police
>authorities, and also pass on any information to the Joint Moscow-Bristol
>Working Group For The Return Of Stolen Russian Fossil Material.
>(2) Would all those who receive this message please forward it to
>colleagues and any list-servers dealing with palaeontology, geology or
>biology (other than vrtpaleo and paleonet).
>(3) Any suggestions as to what other methods might be used to tackle this
>problem would be gratefully received.
>Incidentally, the large number of amphibian skulls (20+) which were stolen
>from the Palaeontological Institute collections in March 1992 have, with
>the exception of a single specimen recovered by Rupert Wild, not been
>located or returned to the Institute. For further details of this
>particular theft see Lethaia, 25, pp 360, and discussion of the theft in
>Nature (1994) vol. 371, p. 729). We appeal again to anyone who may have
>seen these specimens or know of their current whereabouts to pass on the
>details both to us and to the police.
> JOINT MOSCOW-BRISTOL WORKING GROUP
> FOR THE RETURN OF STOLEN RUSSIAN FOSSIL MATERIAL.
>Michael Shiskin, Palaeontological Institute, Moscow, Russia
>David Unwin, Dept. of Geology, University of Bristol, England
>Igor Novikov, Palaeontological Institute, Moscow, Russia
>Michael Benton, Dept. of Geology, University of Bristol, England
>Eric Buffetaut, Universite Paris 6, Paris, France
>Rupert Wild, Staatliches Museum fur Naturkunde, Stuttgart, Germany
>Glenn Storrs, Cincinnati Museum Center, Cincinnati, U.S.A.
>Makoto Manabe, National Museum of Natural History, Tokyo, Japan
>--- End Forwarded Message ---
~~~~~~~~~~~
Ben:
All of our past differences aside, I applaud you for your effort in
trying to help locate the stolen dinosaur fossils.
What lowlife would stoop to stealing skulls and jaws
of Tarbosaurus and Protoceratopse, teeth of Tarbosaurus
efremovi, plus a Late Cretaceous protoceratopsid genus from
Mongolia.
Some people really have a lot of damn nerve.
Meanwhile, I'd like you to assure you that I will do whatever I can
to help apprehend the persons whom you believe to have been
responsible.
Unfortunately, my newsreader got a bit garbled while you were
identifying the eight suspects.
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