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The Mummy of Nodosaur Dinosaur

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The Royal Tyrrell Museum of Palaeontology in Alberta, unveiled Nodosaur Dinosaur Mummy with skin and gust intact you can’t even see its bones.
The Royal Tyrrell Museum of Palaeontology in Alberta, unveiled Nodosaur Dinosaur Mummy with skin and gust intact you can’t even see its bones.
The Royal Tyrrell Museum of Palaeontology in Alberta, Canada unveiled the Mummy of Nodosaur Dinosaur with skin and gust intact, you can’t even see its bones. But yet scientists are hailing it as maybe the best-preserved dinosaur specimen ever discovered. 110 million years later, those bones remain covered by the creature’s intact skin and armor.
Back in 2011, a heavy equipment operator by the name of Shawn Funk. He works for energy company Suncor in Alberta, which was drilling crude oil sands. When he abruptly uncovered walnut brown rocks that looked like ribs. The dinosaur is so well-preserved that numerous have taken to calling it not a fossil, but an honest-to-goodness “dinosaur mummy. However, the creature’s skin, armor, and even some of its guts are intact. Hence, researchers are amazed at its nearly unprecedented level of preservation.
The dinosaur, with fossilized skin and gut contents intact, came from the Millennium Mine six years ago in the oil sands of northern Alberta, once a seabed. That sea was full of life, teeming with huge reptiles. That grew as long as 60 feet, while its shores were traversed by enormous dinosaurs for millions of years. The area has been coughing up fossils since the beginning of recorded time.
Cabel Brown a researcher said we don’t just have a skeleton. Even we have a dinosaur as it would have been. When this dinosaur a member of a new species named “nodosaur” was alive, it was a huge four-legged herbivore protected by a spiky, plated armor and weighing in at approximately 3,000 pounds. The mummified “nodosaur” remains so intact is still something of a mystery that may have been swept away by a flooded river and carried out to sea, where it eventually sank.
Over millions of years on the ocean floor, minerals took the place of the dinosaur’s armor and skin, preserving it in the lifelike form now on display. Moreover, the “nodosaur” was so well-preserved; getting it into its current display form was still an arduous undertaking. The creature was, in fact, first discovered in 2011 when a crude oil mine worker accidentally discovered the specimen while on the job.
Since that lucky moment, it has taken researchers 7,000 hours over the course of the last six years to both tests the remains and prepare them for display at the Royal Tyrrell Museum. Where visitors now have the chance to see the closest thing to a real-life dinosaur that the world has likely ever seen.
Also Read: The Shiprock Mexico
The Royal Tyrrell Museum of Palaeontology in Alberta, Canada unveiled Mummy of Nodosaur Dinosaur with skin and gust intact, you can’t even see it's bones.
The Royal Tyrrell Museum of Palaeontology in Alberta, Canada unveiled a Mummy of Nodosaur Dinosaur with skin and gust intact, you can’t even see its bones.
It may have been swept away by a flooded river and carried out to sea, where it eventually sank to be so incredibly well preserved
It may have been swept away by a flooded river and carried out to sea, where it eventually sank to be so incredibly well-preserved Nodosaur Dinosaur.
The dinosaur is so well-preserved that numerous have taken to calling it not a fossil, but an honest-to-goodness “dinosaur mummy. Photo Credit Robert Clark-National Geographic
The dinosaur is so well-preserved that numerous have taken to calling it not a fossil, but an honest-to-goodness “dinosaur mummy. Photo Credit Robert Clark-National Geographic
However, the creature’s skin, armor, and even some of it's guts intact, researchers are amazed at it's nearly unprecedented level of preservation. Photo Credit Robert Clark-National Geographic-1
However, the creature’s skin, armor, and even some of its guts intact, researchers are amazed at its a nearly unprecedented level of preservation. Photo Credit Robert Clark-National Geographic-1
This is a replica of how nodosaurs must have looked Photo Credit Herschel Hoffmeyer
This is a replica of how Nodosaur Dinosaur must have looked Photo Credit Herschel Hoffmeyer
Source: All That is Interesting 
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