[1][2] She was prepared and restored by the team at Pangea Fossils in Victoria, British Columbia.
Victoria is estimated at the age of around 18–25 at the time of her death 65 million years ago.
Victoria stands as one of the largest T.rex’s mounted in the world at 40 feet in length and was estimated to be approximately 10.5 tons or 21,000 lbs.
The various insights gleaned from her unique and groundbreaking pathologies will be the subject of research for years to come” and “From a bite on her jaw that led to an unusually widespread infection to an absorbed tooth in the maxilla, it is clear she overcame many rivalries and injuries in the struggle to survive as an apex predator.”[1] Some of the notable pathologies include:[1] Victoria has exhibited since 2019 at the Houston Science Center, the Arizona Science Center,[3] and a stand-alone exhibition in Korea.
[6] Visitors to the exhibit will be able to see her complete skeleton, see simulations of her as a predator, protector and mother and will also hear what she might have sounded like.