Dinosaurs Helping to Encourage Tactile, Creative Play
Team members praised the teaching team for having such a well-organised and spacious dinosaur den. We spotted this simple but very effective play area whilst on a visit to a school to conduct a series of dinosaur and fossil themed workshops with Reception classes. The teaching team had laid out a number of play areas related to the term topic of dinosaurs. One play area involved the children building their own “dinosaur world”. A second play area was dedicated to digging for dinosaur bones.
Tactile Exploration and Developing Creative Play
Picture credit: Everything Dinosaur
A Tidy Dinosaur Den
Such a play area encourages creative play, the concept of sharing and working together. We spotted some simple guidelines and instructions stating how many children can play at a station at any one time. The children have the opportunity to explore a range of materials and different types of dinosaur model. This is a great resource for children to help them learn about the properties of materials and of great assistance to kinaesthetic orientated learners.
A simple play area with dinosaur models and other tactile objects helps children to explore the properties of materials. This is a wonderful resource to help encourage creative, independent, imaginative play.
It is an example of dinosaurs and prehistoric animals helping to encourage creative play amongst Foundation Stage children.
Here is a quick and simple recipe to make dinosaur shortbread biscuits. Making biscuits such as these is a fun activity that young children can participate in. These dinosaur shortbread biscuits make great treats or can be used to help with the catering for a dinosaur themed birthday party.
A Recipe for Dinosaur Shortbread Biscuits
Picture credit: Everything Dinosaur
Ingredients (Makes About Twenty Biscuits)
Butter or margarine 110 grammes (4oz)
Caster sugar 50 grammes (2oz)
Plain flour, sifted 175 grammes (6oz)
Extra caster sugar for dusting
Method
Preheat the oven to 150°C /300°F (Gas mark 2). Lightly grease two baking sheets.
Begin by first beating the butter (or margarine) with a wooden spoon to a soft consistency, and then beat in the sugar, followed by the sifted flour.
Still using the wooden spoon, start to bring the mixture together, then finish off with your hands to form a paste.
Transfer the mixture to a board lightly dusted with caster sugar, and then quickly and lightly roll it out to about 1/8 inch (3mm) thick (dusting the rolling pin with sugar if necessary).
Cut the biscuits out using dinosaur biscuit cutters or, a dinosaur-shaped card that acts as a template and then arrange them on the baking sheet and bake on a highish shelf in the oven for 30 minutes. Cool the biscuits on a wire rack, dust them with some caster sugar, and store in an airtight tin to keep them crisp.
Once cooled, the biscuits can be iced and decorated to make a fun dinosaur themed snack or an ideal party food for a prehistoric animal themed party or other special occasion.
Dinosaur Biscuits – Just Out of the Oven
Picture credit: Everything Dinosaur
The Everything Dinosaur Weblog
The Everything Dinosaur weblog is crammed full of helpful articles aimed at the parents, grandparents and guardians of dinosaur enthusiasts and budding, young palaeontologists. If you search our blog using terms such as “dinosaur party”, “cake” and “biscuit”, you will discover lots of helpful articles, ideas, recipes and suggestions to assist you with dinosaur themed party planning and other fun prehistoric animal orientated activities. Have fun!
Everything Dinosaur is a UK-based supplier of dinosaur and prehistoric animal themed models, toys and merchandise, check-out our website: Visit Everything Dinosaur.
As part of our on-going commitment to improve our customer service, there are going to be some changes made to the Everything Dinosaur website. Technical changes are being made to help improve site speed and page loading times and in addition, some aspects of the front end of our site are being tweaked. A section in the footer of our homepage is being changed, the dinosaur themed recipes that were listed on this part of our site are being transferred to our blog.
Dealing with Everything Dinosaur will continue to be a Piece of Cake
Picture credit: Everything Dinosaur
A spokesperson from Everything Dinosaur commented:
“With so many different models and figures available from Everything Dinosaur, our website has thousands of images associated with it. We have set about some improvements to help with the loading speed of the web pages and at the same time, taken the opportunity to move some content making it more accessible by placing it on our huge blog.”
With All the Changes Everything Dinosaur has Planned There Are Lots of Treats in Store
Picture credit: Spire Nursery and Infant School/Everything Dinosaur.
Updating the Everything Dinosaur Website
Visitors to the Everything Dinosaur website will not notice many changes on the front end, but for example, a new wait list function has been added to the site, permitting visitors to be emailed directly and within a few seconds of an out of stock item becoming available again. Furthermore, the Everything Dinosaur Instagram social media button has been added: Follow Everything Dinosaur on Instagram.
The recipes listed on the website, will be replaced by a recent posts element that permits the most recently published blog posts to be linked directly to our main site. This will help with indexing the site and provide our visitors with an up-to-date inventory of our latest blog posts. With a new blog post being published every day, there is a lot of information to get your teeth into!
Visit Everything Dinosaur’s Blog for Lots of Dinosaur Themed Recipe Ideas
Picture credit: Everything Dinosaur
Everything Dinosaur is a UK-based supplier of dinosaur and prehistoric animal themed models, toys and merchandise, check-out our website: Visit Everything Dinosaur.
The extinct clade Creodonta, a term first used by the famous American palaeontologist Edward Drinker Cope (1875), was composed of a great variety of carnivorous mammals, of all shapes and sizes. One of the most imposing of these predatory mammals was Hyaenodon gigas. With a shoulder height of around 1.4 metres H. gigas was one of the largest members of the Hyaenodontidae family. For a comparison, male Bengal tigers (Panthera tigris tigris), stand around 1 metre high at the shoulder.
A fully grown H. gigas is estimated to have weighed around half a tonne. This was a very formidable carnivore.
Those clever people at Safari Ltd have created a stunning image that highlights the beauty and detail of their Wild Safari Prehistoric World Hyaenodon model.
Reflecting on a Beautiful Prehistoric Animal Model – Hyaenodon gigas
Picture credit: Safari Ltd/Everything Dinosaur
The Wild Safari Prehistoric World Hyaenodon gigas Model
Last year, Safari Ltd introduced several new synapsid models. For instance, a Przewalski’s horse was added to their “Winner’s Enclosure” collection. Numerous prehistoric mammals as well as a stunning Dimetrodon replica were also launched. In 2018, Safari Ltd added the Hyaenodon gigas, Uintatherium, Megacerops, Macrauchenia, a Daeodon and a model of an American Mastodon (Mammut americanum).
Super Synapsids on Display
Picture credit: Everything Dinosaur
Naturally, each of these prehistoric animal figures is supplied with its very own fact sheet, so collectors and model fans can learn about the creature that the model represents.
Our congratulations to Safari Ltd for making such a diverse range of figures and for producing such stunning images to accompany their model range. The use of light and the clever photoshop effect of movement of the water in the puddle adds a new level of authenticity to their figures. The reflection of the Hyaenodon model has been skilfully created and we look forward to posting up more examples of this sort of creativity on our blog in the near future.
A Stunning Image to Promote a Prehistoric Animal Model
New CollectA 2019 Prehistoric Animal Models in Stock
The first of the new for 2019 prehistoric animal models from CollectA have arrived at Everything Dinosaur. The armoured dinosaur Borealopelta, the pterosaur Caiuajara, the deluxe Carnotaurus and the Edaphosaurus models are now all in stock. In addition, the set of mini prehistoric animal models has also arrived at our warehouse.
In Stock at Everything Dinosaur, the Box of Mini Prehistoric Animal Models
The CollectA Box of Mini Prehistoric Animal Models
Joining the CollectA mini sets of prehistoric animals series is this new box of mini prehistoric animals, twelve miniature replicas of larger figures within the CollectA range. The models in the box include Megacerops, Daeodon, Paraceratherium, Smilodon, Arsinoitherium, Uintatherium, Andrewsarchus, Moropus, Deinotherium and a Woolly Mammoth. All these are mammals from the Cenozoic, but interestingly the box set features a replica of the giant prehistoric bird Kelenken and the bizarre therapsid Estemmenosuchus – “crowned crocodile”. Estemmenosuchus lived during the Permian, many millions of years before the other creatures featured in the box set evolved.
Borealopelta and the Pterosaur Caiuajara
One of the first of the new models to be announced, back in early November, was the Borealopelta, a model of an armoured dinosaur that was formally named and described in 2017 (Brown et al).
The CollectA Borealopelta Dinosaur Model
Picture credit: Everything Dinosaur
One of the largest models introduced is that of the Brazilian pterosaur Caiuajara (C. dobruskii), it measures 23 centimetres long and that spectacular crest stands around 22 centimetres high. It is a fantastic model of a flying reptile. The Caiuajara model has an articulated lower jaw and it is great to see a replica of a pterosaur added to the CollectA model range.
The CollectA Deluxe Caiuajara Pterosaur Model with a Moveable Jaw
Picture credit: CollectA with additional annotation by Everything Dinosaur
Dinosaur fans had been asking CollectA to produce a large, deluxe version of Carnotaurus to accompany their growing range of different types of theropod dinosaur included in the deluxe model range. The CollectA Carnotaurus is spectacular and it has already attracted a number of positive comments on Everything Dinosaur’s Facebook page. The Edaphosaurus figure has also been eagerly anticipated. CollectA made a commitment some time ago to include more animals from the Palaeozoic in their model range. The CollectA Edaphosaurus is the latest example of this policy.
The CollectA Edaphosaurus and the CollectA Deluxe Carnotaurus
Picture credit: CollectA with additional annotation by Everything Dinosaur
A spokesperson from Everything Dinosaur commented:
“It is fantastic to see the first of the new for 2019 CollectA prehistoric animal models arrive, we are looking forward to despatching the models to our customers who have requested these figures, these are certainly exciting times for CollectA.”
Dinosaurs Innovated When it Came to Egg Production
Many museums include the fossilised remains of dinosaur eggs amongst their natural history collections and palaeontologists are aware that reptiles were laying eggs on land long before the dinosaurs evolved, but what we know about the evolution of reptile eggs (amniotic eggs in general), is largely based on inference and conjecture. The problem is, for the first 100 million years or so of amniote evolution, there is very little fossil data related to reptile reproduction to study. What we do know, is based on Middle Jurassic to Late Cretaceous fossils.
Although, dinosaur eggs are rare, the examples we do have, such as those associated with Asian oviraptorids demonstrate that dinosaur eggs had thick, hardened shells. However, a new study suggests that it was not always like this and that the three main Sub-orders of the Dinosauria probably evolved thick, tough eggs independently.
Examples of Eggs from Different Archosaurs (Avian and Non-avian Dinosaurs)
Picture credit: Royal Society Open Science
Studying Some of the World’s Oldest Dinosaur Eggs Reveals New Information
Writing in the on-line, open access journal “Scientific Reports”, a team of scientists, including Robert Reisz (University of Toronto Mississauga) and Koen Stein (Royal Belgian Institute of Natural Sciences, Brussels), have examined some of the oldest examples of dinosaur eggs known and revealed new information about the evolution of dinosaur reproduction.
The researchers examined the eggs and eggshells of three coeval, but geographically widely distributed Early Jurassic basal sauropodomorph dinosaurs (Sinemurian faunal stage). These fossils came from Argentina, China and South Africa and include the eggs of Massospondylus and Lufengosaurus. Their analysis showed that the basal sauropodomorph eggs all had the basic structure, they had a thin calcareous layer less than 100 microns thick. This thin shell layer contrasts strongly with the much thicker calcareous shells associated with Late Jurassic and later dinosaur eggs.
At approximately 195 million years old, they are the earliest known eggs in the fossil record, and they were all laid by similar, herbivorous dinosaurs that ranged in size from four to eight metres in length and were the most common and widely spread dinosaurs of their time. These types of plant-eating dinosaur were the forerunners of the giant sauropods of the Jurassic, dinosaurs such as Brontosaurus, Diplodocus and Brachiosaurus.
A Massospondylus Nesting Site (Life Reconstruction)
Picture credit: Julius Csotonyi
Putting the Dinosaur Egg Research into Context
Putting the research into context Professor Reisz explained:
“Reptile and mammal precursors appear as skeletons in the fossil record starting 316 million years ago, yet we know nothing of their eggs and eggshells until 120 million years later. It’s a great mystery that eggs suddenly show up at this point, but not earlier.”
The researchers concluded that these Early Jurassic eggs represented a step in the evolution of dinosaur reproduction, their shells were paper-thin and brittle, proportionately much thinner than the eggs of extant birds. However, thicker, tougher eggshells in the Dinosauria were to evolve across all three Sub-orders later. The much thicker eggshells associated with sauropods, ornithischian dinosaurs and the Theropoda must have evolved independently.
Professor Reisz added:
“We know that these early eggs had hard shells because during fossilisation they cracked and broke, but the shell pieces retained their original curvature.”
Other authors of the scientific paper include Edina Prondvai and Jean-Marc Baele. Shell thickness was analysed along with membrane thickness, mineral content and distribution of pores, looking for clues about why these early eggs might have developed hard shells. The scientists concluded that hard-shelled eggs evolved early in dinosaur evolution, with thickening of the calcareous layer (greater than 150 microns), occurring independently in several groups, but a few million years later other reptiles also developed hard-shelled eggs. One possibility is that hard and eventually thicker shells may have evolved to shield dinosaur embryos and other reptiles from predators.
Professor Reisz commented:
“The hard shells would protect the embryos from invertebrates that could burrow into the buried egg nests and destroy them.”
Linked to Increased Oxygen in the Atmosphere
Advanced mineralisation of amniote eggshell including those of dinosaurs (≥150 microns in thickness), in general occurred not earlier than the Middle Jurassic and may correspond with a global trend of an increase in atmospheric oxygen. If there were higher levels of atmospheric oxygen, then this would facilitate more efficient gaseous exchange through the porous eggshell and across the egg membranes. More efficient diffusion would permit the evolution of thicker eggshells, which in turn would offer greater resistance to damage and more protection from predators.
A Lufengosaurus Embryo
Picture credit: D. Mazierski
Raising Further Questions About Mesozoic Reproduction Strategies
The study raises some intriguing questions that may well lead to further research projects. For example, palaeontologists are aware that many types of marine reptile evolved viviparity (live birth), whilst the fossil evidence for the terrestrial Dinosauria seems to indicate that they continued to rely on egg laying. Why didn’t the highly diverse dinosaurs evolve different reproductive strategies over their 160 million years of existence?
Everything Dinosaur acknowledges the assistance of a press release from the University of Toronto in the compilation of this article.
The scientific paper: “Structure and Evolutionary Implications of the Earliest (Sinemurian, Early Jurassic) Dinosaur Eggs and Eggshells” by Koen Stein, Edina Prondvai, Timothy Huang, Jean-Marc Baele, P. Martin Sander and Robert Reisz published in Scientific Reports.
The children in the Reception class at Micklehurst All Saints Church Primary (Ashton-under-Lyne), have been learning all about dinosaurs this term and they have been taking part in a wide range of dinosaur and fossil themed activities under the expert supervision of the teaching team.
Whilst on a visit to conduct a workshop with the enthusiastic young learners, a team member from Everything Dinosaur was given the opportunity to admire some of the displays in the classroom which highlight the children’s work.
One of the key objectives within the statutory framework for the early years foundation stage (EYFS), is to inspire children and to help them develop an enthusiasm for learning. Dinosaurs inspire children and prehistoric animals such as Tyrannosaurus rex certainly engages their curiosity. The children were eager to show what they had been doing in class and pointed out the colourful display which included pictures of dinosaurs that they had labelled.
The pupils were keen to demonstrate their knowledge about dinosaurs, even dinosaurs that were omnivores! A dinosaur themed display dovetails beautifully into the national curriculum, it assists with literacy development and helps to expand vocabularies as well as providing the children with lots of opportunities to express themselves and to explore the properties of materials through creative art.
The dinosaur foot measuring resources we provided linked into the teacher’s scheme of work as the children had been getting used to using measuring cubes and standard units. We also challenged the class to draw for our dinosaur expert their very own prehistoric animal, as an extension we suggested that the children have a go at measuring their own drawings. The pronunciation guide we gave the teacher, might come in handy with all those long dinosaur names.
A Dinosaur Den
Part of the classroom had been turned into a dinosaur den. There were lots of stimulating activities for the children to try, including digging for dinosaur skeletons in sand and lots of books about dinosaurs (fiction and non-fiction), for the children to read. The dinosaur den was very tidy and well organised.
JurassicCollectables Unboxing A Trio of T. rex Figures
The talented team at JurassicCollectables got a surprise this week. A large box was delivered to them, it came from us at Everything Dinosaur, but what did it contain? The narrator could hardly contain his excitement as he carefully cut through the securing tape and examined the contents. Inside, were all three of the rare, limited edition Kaiyodo Sofubi Toy Box T. rex dinosaur figures. A trio of Tyrannosaurus rex models from Japan for JurassicCollectables to review.
An Unboxing Video (Kaiyodo Sofubi Toy Box T. rex Figures) from JurassicCollectables
Video credit: JurassicCollectables
What’s in the Box?
In this short video (it lasts just under three minutes), the narrator discovers all three of the Kaiyodo Sofubi Toy Box T. rex figures. First out of the box is the yellow and black colour variant of this articulated dinosaur model series (SOFUBITOYBOX018A TYRANNOSAURUS REX). The next dinosaur to feature is the “smoke green” colour variant from Kaiyodo (SOFUBITOYBOX018B TYRANNOSAURUS REX) and last but not least, the narrator reveals that the parcel also contained the beautiful “classic” colour variant which comes in its own presentation pack.
The narrator comments that he had to find a new place to shoot the video, as the box was so large, the three models are surprisingly big, they each measure around twenty-seven centimetres long.
All Three of the Kaiyodo Sofubi Toy Box T. rex Dinosaur Figures
Clever Articulation
All three models were made to highlight the capabilities of the design team at Kaiyodo, when it comes to constructing articulated prehistoric animal figures. Each model has a total of ten points of articulation, as far as we at Everything Dinosaur know, this is the largest amount of articulation in any T. rex collectable figure which stands under thirty centimetres high. The neck, the upper jaw, forelimbs and both ankles are articulated. In addition, there are two points of articulation associated with the tail.
The Dinosaur Models can be placed in Different Poses
A History of Tyrannosaurus rex Poses in One Dinosaur Figure
The concept behind the design of these limited edition figures, is quite simple. Kaiyodo wanted to produce a single dinosaur model that permitted the collector to place the T. rex in all its poses that have been proposed for how this dinosaur stood since it was formally named and scientifically described back in 1905. This was quite a challenge, however, each model can be put into the traditional “kangaroo stance”, with the tail resting on the ground. It can also be posed in numerous other configurations, representing more modern approaches to the stance of this hypercarnivore from the Late Cretaceous of North America.
The “Smoke Green” Kaiyodo Sofubi Toy Box T. rex Standing Tall
Picture credit: Everything Dinosaur
Rare Dinosaur Models
When first produced, these three figures were part of a limited production run and all colour versions are now all out of production (we think). These Japanese models are certainly very rare and not widely available. The Kaiyodo Sofubi articulated Tyrannosaurus rex figures are for collectors, they are classified as “collectable prehistoric animal figures”, as such they have a 15 years and above age classification. These are articulated dinosaur models that have an age rating!
The “Classic” Kaiyodo Sofubi Toy Box Tyrannosaurus rex
Tyrannosaurus rex Models
We look forward to watching the model reviews from JurassicCollectables.
To see the huge range of prehistoric animal model reviews made by JurassicCollectables, check out their amazing YouTube channel, don’t forget to subscribe! Catch: JurassicCollectables on YouTube.
Win a Copy of the Superb “The Dinosaurs Rediscovered” by Professor Michael Benton
WIN! WIN! WIN! with Everything Dinosaur! Win a copy of the brilliant new book by Professor Mike Benton
Everything Dinosaur Book Competition
THIS COMPETITION IS NOW CLOSED.
Everything Dinosaur has another super, dinosaur themed giveaway. We have a copy of the brand new book by Professor Michael Benton “The Dinosaurs Rediscovered” and we are giving you the chance to win it.
Get to Grips with the Very Latest Dinosaur Discoveries and Research
Aimed at serious dinosaur fanatics as well as general readers with an interest in science, this latest publication by the highly respected Professor Benton provides an authoritative account on how our knowledge about the Dinosauria has changed in recent years. This really is a must have! Make room on your book shelf for this excellent publication. Even better, you can win a copy courtesy of Everything Dinosaur!
Win a Copy of “The Dinosaurs Rediscovered” in our Competition
All you have to do is “Like” Everything Dinosaur’s FACEBOOK page, then comment on our dinosaur book competition post giving a name for the superb Sinosauropteryx dinosaur model depicted on the front cover. The Sinosauropteryx illustrated by Julius Csotonyi is stunning, but he/she needs a name!
Don’t Forget to Suggest a Name and to “Like” our Facebook Page
We will draw the lucky winner at random and the Sinosauropteryx naming competition closes at midnight on Sunday 31st March. Good luck!
New for 2019 CollectA Models Due to Arrive Next Week
Exciting news for dinosaur fans and model collectors, the first batch of the new for 2019 prehistoric animal models from CollectA are due to arrive at Everything Dinosaur next week. Stocks of the Borealopelta, the Deluxe 1:40 scale Carnotaurus, the super-sized pterosaur figure – Caiuajara and the 1:20 scale Deluxe Edaphosaurus are all on their way. In addition, the new for 2019 set of mini prehistoric animal models are also due to arrive at the same time.
Coming into Stock at Everything Dinosaur
Picture credit: Everything Dinosaur
The picture above shows the first four models coming into stock along with the mini prehistoric animal model set which will feature an additional twelve figures. Back in November, when we were given the official go ahead to discuss the 2019 CollectA offering, Everything Dinosaur team members posted up the first pictures of these hand-painted models. They were very well received.
A spokesperson from Everything Dinosaur commented:
” We are delighted to announce that the first new prehistoric animals from CollectA are going to be in stock very soon. These quality models capture the essence of CollectA, they don’t just focus on dinosaurs, only two of the sixteen figures represent members of the Dinosauria [Carnotaurus and Borealopelta], we know how keen model collectors are to acquire animals from the Palaeozoic and Cenozoic Eras as well.”
Heading Your Way! The CollectA Deluxe Carnotaurus Dinosaur Model
Many manufacturers focus on just a handful of figures, but the CollectA range is huge with a wide variety of prehistoric animals (and plants) represented. Over recent years the company has introduced several sets of mini-prehistoric animal figures. Later on this month, Everything Dinosaur will be receiving stocks of the prehistoric animal model set, or as we at Everything Dinosaur like to call it “the synapsids plus one”. All the figures are synapsids, with the exception of the mini Kelenken model, which as a bird comes from the archosaur lineage of diapsids.
The CollectA Mini Prehistoric Animal Model Set
Picture credit: Everything Dinosaur
How many of the twelve models in the set can you name? As a clue and to give you a start, we have given you the name of one already.
Sailing Towards Us the Sail-backed Reptile Figure Edaphosaurus
Picture credit: Everything Dinosaur
We are looking forward to getting all these new models into stock next week. Rest assured all those dinosaur fans on our reserve lists, as soon as the models come in we will be emailing you to let you know that the figures are available and that we have set one aside.
To view the range of CollectA prehistoric animal models available from Everything Dinosaur: CollectA Prehistoric Animals.