Showing Tag: "dinosaur" (Show all posts)

Irwin Family visit AAOD

Posted by Trish Sloan on Friday, May 27, 2011, In : In The Laboratory 

Australian Age of Dinosaurs had great pleasure in showing the Irwin Family around our Preparation Laboratory earlier this month.
Robert decided to take his mum on a well deserved holiday around Winton for Mothers Day. While this is a great gift for Terri, Robert also loves Dinosaurs. Australovenator (aka 'Banjo') Australia's largest predatory animal, is his favorite dinosaur (along with Micropachycephalosaurus apparently), so needless to say he was in his element.



David Elliott took the Irw...
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Australovenator Cake

Posted by Trish Sloan on Saturday, December 11, 2010, In : Out and About 

Australovenator, front and centre at Australia Zoo for Robert Irwin's 7th Birthday!

Giant blow up dinosaurs rides, life-like dinosaur puppets, real dinosaur bones and a living, breathing palaeontologist... what else could a dinosaur mad birthday boy want? An awesome Australovenator cake, that's what!

1st December saw a great celebration of Robert Irwin's 7th Birthday at Australia Zoo. With a roaring T. rex and the cutest ornithopod baby puppets; huge crocodile and dino slides; along with his ...
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Josh Cotten's Work Experience

Posted by Trish Sloan on Saturday, June 19, 2010, In : What They Say 

Josh Cotten came out to Australian Age of Dinosaurs to follow his dreams of becoming a Palaeonotologist. He spent six days working with us on real dinosaur bones and helping with collection work. Josh also helped with sieving and sorting, looking for turtle, fish, crocodile and even dinosaur bone fragments in the matrix collected from dig sites.

Here we see Josh working on 'Wade', an as yet undescribed Australian Dinosaur. The bone is a part of a vertebrae from Wade's back. When we publish W...
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Dinner with the Dinosaurs

Posted by Trish Sloan on Sunday, June 13, 2010, In : On The Jump-Up 

How cool would it be to say that you went all the way to Winton and had dinner with the dinosaurs?

Well the AAOD team put this idea it to the test.

Outback Aussie Tours visit us all the time and some groups arrive in the late afternoon for a tour, then nibbles at sunset followed by a BBQ dinner in the Largest Preparation Facility in Australia!




Here a group enjoy a wonderful evening with the AAOD Team and the dinosaurs. You can see in the background part of our fossil display and on the left si...
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John & Wilma Carlow

Posted by Trish Sloan on Sunday, June 13, 2010, In : What They Say 

John and Wilma drove all the way from Darwin to Winton to join us in the prep lab and commence a 10 day journey into the world of dinosaurs. After all the serious stuff and a full days training, they returned with smiles and a looming addiction... Wilma became so engrossed she had issues taking a break; so we went to extreme's by disconnecting her tools! John just took it all in his stride. They spoilt us with regular bowls of chocolates and sweets for the tearoom. That works for us!  As thei...
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Recreating Banjo—a strategy

Posted by Brant Bassam on Saturday, June 12, 2010, In : Digital Dinosaurs 

In the previous digital dinosaur post I said the right way to rebuild a dinosaur is to capture every shred of scientific evidence. Seems obvious doesn’t it? But there are a lot of dinosaurs that we all know and love that contradict the evidence. Sauropods are a classic exampl...


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Reunited

Posted by Trish Sloan on Tuesday, June 8, 2010, In : In The Laboratory 

Working in the lab gives people the opportunity to discover brand new Australian Dinosaur bones. Most would say the most wonderful experience is removing the matrix (clay) and seeing the bone being exposed for the first time in 100 million years. However some would say the most rewarding and exhilarating part is witnessing bones that have been apart for millions of years and seeing them be reunited like they've never been apart.


In the photo above is the right humerus and ulna from Banjo, t...
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