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Sue was the subject of a 2000 educational computer game called I See SUE, which was published by Simon and Schuster Interactive. [57] Sue was featured in the Dresden Files book series book 7, Dead Beat, as being part of the Field Museum exhibits; the central character later uses Sue to ride into battle as a reanimated zombie T. rex. [58]
The model Tyrannosaurus was constructed of fiberglass and steel, with a height of 26.3 metres (86 ft) and a length of 46 metres (151 ft), [1] considerably larger than the largest known specimens of the actual dinosaur, known as Sue, which reached up to 12.8 m (42 ft) in length, [2] and up to 4 m (13 ft) tall at the hips.
Sue Hendrickson: Explorer of Land and Sea. Philadelphia, PA: Chelsea House Publishers. p. 104. ISBN 978-0-7910-7713-9. "Dinosaur discoverer trusts intuition", The Oprah Winfrey Show. "Ask a Dinosaur Expert", an interview with Sue Hendrickson conducted by Scholastic Press; Dinosaur Named Sue (2003), Bt Bound. ISBN 0-613-36416-3. Sue hendrickson
A fact from Sue (dinosaur) appeared on Wikipedia's Main Page in the Did you know column on 17 April 2007. The text of the entry was as follows: ... Height at hips: 13 ...
Scotty has a larger hip girdle than Sue; its femur is also longer and wider than Sue's at 133 cm and has a circumference of 590 mm while Sue has a femur length of 132 cm and a circumference of 580 mm. [3] The projected weight was calculated by analysing how much weight the leg bones would have been able to support. [18]
Sue is a female Supersaurus who saved Littlefoot from a Belly Dragger by crushing its face in The Land Before Time X: The Great Longneck Migration. Sue is kind and gentle. Sue is kind and gentle. She is voiced by Bernadette Peters .
On 14 May 1992, a raid led by the states U.S. Attorney Kevin Shieffer with 35 FBI agents and 20 National Guardsmen recovered the Tyrannosaurus rex named "Sue" from Larson's commercial fossil dealership, the Black Hills Institute of Geological Research. The federal agents seized the fossil of "Sue", along with other fossils and records. [2]
The decision to use replicas from Sue for filling several missing body parts such as the feet, was made due to Sue being roughly of the same length and robusticity, and the fact that they both have been estimated to be very old for a Tyrannosaurus. Most estimates suggest sizes from 12 (39.5 ft) to 12.5 meters in length (41 ft).