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Hendrickson's Miami attorney, Jonathan Cohen, said Hendrickson sold conch pearls, produced by the saltwater mollusk found in tropical waters, to upscale jewelers, such as Mikimoto and Cartier.
Sue Hendrickson is a female Indiana Jones. Her greatest discovery, named in her honor, is one of the biggest attractions at the Field Museum in Chicago.
Hendrickson's Miami attorney, Jonathan Cohen, said Hendrickson sold conch pearls, produced by the saltwater mollusk found in tropical waters, to upscale jewelers, such as Mikimoto and Cartier.
Treasure hunter Sue Hendrickson’s secret skull session with world-famous T-rex It had been a long time since Hendrickson laid eyes on “Sue the T-rex,” the famous fossil she discovered in ...
HENDRICKSON, Sue Marshall Sue Marshall Hendrickson, 85, of Miamisburg, passed away Sunday, September 6, 2020, at Hospice of Butler & Warren County. She was born May 31, 1935, in Greenville, Ohio ...
On this day in 1990, paleontologist Sue Hendrickson discovered what turned out to be be the largest and most complete Tyrannosaurus rex skeleton ever unearthed -- but they almost missed it.
Sue Hendrickson: the fossil hunter Sue Hendrickson, 67, is a legend among dinosaur-lovers – she found what it is still the most impressive T-Rex fossil ever unearthed. Here, she explains how she ...
Paleontologist Sue Hendrickson says she always felt she was the "wrong person" to find the famed T. rex.
After a nomadic life hunting dinosaur bones, scuba diving on shipwrecks, collecting rare amber fossils and exploring Cleopatra’s sunken palace, Susan Hendrickson decided a few years ago to se… ...
Sue Hendrickson’s 1990 discovery of the Tyrannosaurus rex fossil that now bears her name is credited as one of the most significant paleontological finds. But until Sunday, the 49-year-old He… ...
Sue the Dinosaur’s Discoverer and Field Paleontologist Sue Hendrickson tells John how she happened upon the bones of Sue, the Dinosaur, who is soon being moved from her lobby territory in the Field ...
Here’s what. “Sue isn’t jealous,” chirped noted paleontologist Sue Hendrickson, who discovered the most complete T. rex skeleton while rummaging around dino country in South Dakota decades ...