THE WALL STREET JOURNAL / CALIFORNIA
Two years ago, Mercedes-Benz reportedly paid $1 million to get its
M-class sport-utility vehicle featured in "The Lost World," the sequel
to "Jurassic Park." But Honda got the chance to have its SUV haul real
dinosaur eggs on behalf of the Los Angeles County Natural History Museum
-- for the price of shipping and handling.
Last March, Luis Chiappe, the museum's associate curator of
vertebrate paleontology, found himself in Argentina's remote Patagonia
region with more than 200 fossilized sauropod eggs and no way to get
them home. The museum turned to one of its sponsors -- Honda Motor Co.,
which quickly coughed up a generator and two four-wheel-drive SUVs: a
CR-V from a local Honda dealer and the larger Passport model, not sold
in Argentina, which was driven from Washington, D.C., to Miami, and
shipped to Patagonia. Extra tires, fan belts, windshield wipers and air
filters were sent ahead of the car as a precaution against the
inhospitable terrain at the field site, where shrubs bristle with
three-inch spikes and finding a mechanic means crossing miles of
badlands. Dr. Chiappe, who unveiled his findings earlier this month at the
Exposition Park museum, had seen those conditions wreak havoc before. In
a 1997 dig, the paleontologist and his colleagues lost an entire week
when a 15-year-old, locally bought Ford pickup broke down.
The paleontologist insists his crew, rather than his ride, deserves
most of the credit. "Even if you're using a horse, you're going to make
the same discoveries," he says. Nevertheless, the vehicles held up
admirably, he says, carting dinosaur eggs and plaster-encased bones
across steep ravines and around an extinct volcano.
Honda officials, meanwhile, have had their Passport returned to them,
although spokeswoman Barbara Ponce says, "We would not loan it out ever
again." She adds: "I have left specific instructions that it not be
cleaned -- there may be some tarantulas in there."
If It Was a Movie,
The Eggs Would
Hatch in the Back
By Ryan Tate
06/23/1999
The Wall Street Journal
CA2
(Copyright (c) 1999, Dow Jones & Company, Inc.)
Copyright © 2000 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved.