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Officially Selected for the Festival Season 

September 2024

Terra Draconis: Posterity And Prosperity Of Fossils In The Modern Age

Terra Draconis: Posterity And Prosperity Of Fossils In The Modern Age

Director:

Braeden Clete Meyer

Producer:

Writer:

Braeden Clete Meyer

Selected for the following category(s)

Best Documentary Short

Since its inception as a commercial interest in the 19th century, a growing debate has formed around vertebrate fossils to collect, research, and sell significant specimens on the world stage. In 1997, the most-complete Tyrannosaurus Rex specimen found to date, Sue, was auctioned off to the Chicago Field Museum for an unprecedented $8.3 million. In 2020 the famous Tyrannosaurus Rex named Stan sold for a record-breaking amount over three times the winning bid for Sue. Academic and commercial interests were baffled and have only worsened concerns over who should be able to own, study, and collect significant fossils in the modern age. The film documents the long-standing divide between a variety of interests involved in the ownership of dinosaur fossils in the academic, commercial, private, and legal sectors of multi-million dollar fossil markets. Following interests based in Montana, Colorado, and South Dakota (some of the "hot-beds" of fossil collection in the Western United States), the film involves the opinions and values towards the ownership and sale of fossils in the modern age for posterity or prosperity.

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