All about dinosaurs, fossils and prehistoric animals by Everything Dinosaur team members.
3 03, 2008

Albertosaurus (Safari Ltd)

By |2022-11-10T11:28:52+00:00March 3rd, 2008|Everything Dinosaur Products|0 Comments

Albertosaurus Dinosaur Model

One of our favourite models of tyrannosaurs from northern Laramidia.  A wonderful replica of the tyrannosaur known as Albertosaurus (fossils found in Alberta Province, Canada).  At Everything Dinosaur, we research and write our own dinosaur and prehistoric animal fact sheets.  Buyers of Albertosaurus models and figures (and most other prehistoric animal models for that matter), from our website also receive a fact sheet about that animal.  The fact sheets explain some of the science and research behind the extinct creature.

An Albertosaurus Dinosaur Model (Safari Ltd)

A Model of Albertosaurus (Safari Ltd)

Carnegie Collectibles Albertosaurus dinosaur model.  This dinosaur model has been retired and is out of production – update.

Picture credit: Everything Dinosaur

Albertosaurus Dinosaur Model

Safari Ltd make a wide range of dinosaur and prehistoric animal themed replicas.  The company’s scale model range of which Albertosaurus is part, is very collectible.

To view the range of Safari Ltd models available from Everything Dinosaur and other prehistoric animal replicas and figures: Dinosaur and Prehistoric Animal Models.

The Carnegie Collectibles Albertosaurus dinosaur model is a scale model of this Late Cretaceous meat-eater.  Update – the Carnegie Collectibles range of dinosaur and prehistoric animal figures has been retired and is out of production (2014).

2 03, 2008

Remember the Ordovician

By |2023-02-24T17:59:36+00:00March 2nd, 2008|Geology, Main Page|0 Comments

Remember the Ordovician – An important part of the Palaeozoic

Sandwiched between the geological periods of the Cambrian and the Silurian comes the Ordovician, (pronounced “Or-doe-viss-ian”).  The period lasted approximately 50 million years 495 to 443 million years ago.  Like the Silurian period that followed it, the Ordovician was named after an ancient British tribe, a Romano-British hill tribe the Ordovices.  Evidence from rock strata indicates that during the early Ordovician, marine transgressions (sea levels rising and flooding land) were at their greatest, much of the continents around at the time became flooded.  Rising seas are a problem today, a result of global climate change; but the rises experienced in the Holocene are fortunately, not likely to be on the scale as seen in the early Ordovician.

Ordovician

Marine life continued to diversify with a huge number of different types of animals and algae becoming established.  However, this abundance of life was not to last.  Geological data suggests that the global climate became increasingly wetter and colder.  At the end of the Ordovician much of the Earth experienced an Ice Age and the subsequent locking up of vast amounts of water led to a global reduction in sea level.  Estimates as to the extent of the sea level fall vary, some scientists claim that it fell by as much as 300 metres but others put forward a more conservative estimate of about 100 metres (still an immense change in climate and environment).  Many of the shallow seas dried out leaving behind salt and other minerals.  These changes led to a mass extinction with many forms of marine life, especially sedentary ones being killed off.

Trace Fossils

Rocks of Ordovician age show trace fossils indicating that during this period the first animals ventured out onto land.  Sets of strange parallel trackways, only 10 mm wide or so have been found in upper Ordovician strata in northern England.  These trackways, trace fossils, are believed to have been made by segmented arthropods as they moved over mud by the side of freshwater pools.  These are some of the first signs of animals beginning to migrate onto the land.

Despite the fact that in geological terms the Ordovician comes before the Silurian it was named and described as a period of geological time after both the Cambrian and Silurian had been named.  A Scottish schoolmaster and geologist (born in England; he settled in Scotland), Charles Lapworth made a detailed study of the strata in the Southern Uplands hills and mountains of Scotland.  He mapped the complex succession of ancient marine strata using fossils to identify the relative age of strata, this is called biostratigraphy.

Work Published

In 1879, he published his work helping to resolve a controversy regarding the age of rocks that had raged for sometime within the scientific world.  Ever since the English professor of geology, the Reverend Adam Sedgewick and his co-worker Sir Roderick Murchison named the Cambrian and Silurian periods in 1835, the actual age of ancient rocks and the order in which some of them had been laid down was debated.

Using graptolite fossils, Charles Lapworth was able to correlate successive rock strata and work out the correct chronological sequence of deposition.  He identified three distinguishable and observable lower Palaeozoic faunas.  It was this work that led to the recognition of the Ordovician as a distinct geological period separating the older Cambrian strata from the younger Silurian.

For models of Palaeozoic invertebrates and other prehistoric creatures: CollectA Age of Dinosaurs Popular Models.

1 03, 2008

Everything Dinosaur Team Members

By |2022-11-10T11:24:39+00:00March 1st, 2008|Everything Dinosaur News and Updates, Photos|0 Comments

Team Members at Everything Dinosaur

Another busy day at the dinosaur model and toy company Everything Dinosaur.  Recently, team members had to go into a professional photographic studio so that they could take some new pictures of the dinosaur toys, plush, dinosaur models and other prehistoric animal themed merchandise that make up the company’s product range.  At the end of the shoot we were able to take some more pictures of staff members having fun.

Team Members at Everything Dinosaur

Having fun with Everything Dinosaur.

Picture credit: Everything Dinosaur

With staff packing orders for customers every day, even at weekends it is important to every now and then to have some fun.  After all, we do spend a lot of time either at the office or in the warehouse.  Or perhaps it is because we are surrounded by dinosaur toys and prehistoric animal models all day.

The famous Chinese philosopher Confucius is believed to have said “find a job that you love and you will never have to work a day in your life”.

We at Everything Dinosaur think this is very sound advice.  To see the range of dinosaur and prehistoric animal themed items we have in stock: Visit Everything Dinosaur.

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