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Sue at The Field Museum
All About Sue
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Who is Sue?
All About Sue
Sue's Vital Statistics
Sue's Significance
Sue's Discovery
The Dispute Over Sue
The Purchase of Sue
Sue's Connection
Timeline of Events
Preparation and Mounting
Sue's Skull
Fact, Theory, Speculation
The Science of Sue
Freaquently Asked Questions
Image Gallery
Just for Kids
Educator's Resources
Plannign Your Visit
Events and Programs
Sue Store
Traveling Sue
Dinos at the Field
Sue Quiz
Sue e-Cards
Sue Interactive
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Facts, Theory, Speculation

Facts are things we know are true because we can:

see, smell, hear, taste, or touch them,
measure them,
manipulate them,
and show them to others.

The facts about Sue, and all other dinosaurs, come from studying the parts that can be directly observed--the fossilized bones or the sediments they were buried and fossilized in.

Fact: Sue is the world’s most complete T. rex.

How do we know? We compared Sue’s skeleton to all the other known T. rex skeletons. In the end, Sue--with over 200 individual bones--was more complete than any of them. (© The Field Museum GN89471_75c)


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Who is Sue | All About Sue | Image Gallery | Just for Kids | Educators' Resources | Planning Your Visit |
Events and Programs | Sue Store | Traveling Sue | Dinos at the Field | Sue Quiz | Sue e-Cards | Sue Interactive


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