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Mongolia makes moves to shut down fossil black market

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A museum in Ulan Bator displaying dinosaur fossils returned from overseas in Ulan Bator. Photo: AFP
Agence France-Presse

For years, herder Gelegrash had a sideline bringing tourists to see a dinosaur skull hidden near the Flaming Cliffs in Mongolia’s Gobi Desert. Then, one day, it was gone.

It is one of thousands of ancient fossils that have disappeared from the country since American explorer Roy Chapman Andrews – supposedly the inspiration for the film character Indiana Jones – discovered dinosaur eggs there nearly a century ago.

Palaeontologists and smugglers alike have descended on the sands ever since.

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The Flaming Cliffs in the Gobi Desert. Photo: AFP
The Flaming Cliffs in the Gobi Desert. Photo: AFP
Now the Mongolian government is mounting a campaign to reclaim the lost relics, hoping to bring home fossils long held in foreign museums and the curiosity cabinets of private collectors – such as Hollywood star Nicolas Cage – who pay hundreds of thousands of dollars for them on the open market.
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In his yurt near the red sandstone cliffs, Gelegrash laughed about the skull’s potential value: “If I had known it was worth so much, I would have sold it myself.”

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