The Natural History Museum’s cast specimen of a Diplodocus, affectionately known as Dippy Diplodocus, has been seen by approximately 90 million visitors since 1905. However, in 2016 plans were ...
Given its distinctive long neck, tail, and sturdy legs, it could also represent an entirely new dinosaur species related to ...
The remains of the earliest dinosaurs may lie undiscovered in the Amazon and other equatorial regions of South America and Africa, suggests a new study led by UCL (University College London) ...
Dippy the dinosaur is a plaster-of-Paris replica of a Diplodocus carnegii skeleton. The original skeleton is housed at the Carnegie Museum of Natural History in Pittsburgh, USA. There are several ...
Experience the convergence of art, science, and engineering with a strictly limited-edition miniature cast of Fern – our pioneering bronze Diplodocus masterpiece.
Scientists think they know where the missing pieces to the puzzle of the evolution of dinosaurs could be found.