Day 31 Monday 17th July
After doing
some shopping before we left, we had fairly uneventful trip from Longreach to
Winton. We arrived well before lunch. We had heard that it was very busy at
Winton and many of the parks were full. The first place we tried, was booked
out so we were lucky to squeeze into another caravan park, taking the last spot
they had. We booked in for 2 nights as we knew that one of the places we wanted
to visit was on a gravel road and 120kms from Winton so we wouldn’t be taking
the van. We wanted to visit the “Australian Age of Dinosaurs”, about 28kms out
of town. We headed out after lunch and started our tours at 2pm. The reception
centre, display and lab area are set in a stunning landscape (called the
Jump-up Site). Our first tour was of the fossil preparation laboratory where
staff and volunteers were working on real 95 million-year-old dinosaur bone
fossils. I was so surprised at the huge number of dinosaur fossils found in
this area over the last 20 years. We were shown how the fossils are stored in plaster
castings until they can be worked on. After this we went into the fossil
collection room and theatre where we watched two very informative videos of how
the centre started and some the first, large dinosaur fossils found in the
area. We were shown fossils from 3 different dinosaurs and then shown how
scientists work out how the dinosaur moved and its appearance. From here we
hopped onto a bus and we were taken to the Dinosaur Canyon. Our guide took us
through an amazing canyon with life-size displays of dinosaurs and outdoor
galleries showing how the fossils were formed. This whole thing was a very
special experience and we would thoroughly recommend it to anyone who has the
slightest interest in dinosaurs.
PS An echidna decided to walk in front of the bus, as they do!! (see last 2 photos)


























do they carbon date the fossils there?. didn't take a photo of the local west lakes fossil robbicus gottabigadicus.
ReplyDeletelooks impressive.
do they carbon date the fossils there?. didn't take a photo of the local west lakes fossil robbicus gottabigadicus.
ReplyDeletelooks impressive.