83°F
weather icon Mostly Clear

Britain’s most famous dinosaur is up for adoption

LONDON -- Do you have a bit of space to spare? Is it big enough to house a truly vast visitor? If so, you could be in with a chance of bagging yourself a really big roommate.

Dippy the Diplodocus, the most famous dinosaur in Britain, is looking for a new home.

Dippy has spent decades alternately terrifying passing schoolkids and teaching them about the wonders of the natural world at London‘s Natural History Museum -- and even starred in hit movie "One of Our Dinosaurs is Missing" along the way.

Now, after more than a century on display, Dippy is about to be "retired" from its prime spot in the venue‘s main Hinze Hall, to be replaced by a blue whale skeleton.

But the museum‘s bosses don‘t want the bones -- actually casts of the original fossils of the Diplodocus carnegii discovered in Wyoming in 1898 -- gathering dust in a back room or packed into crates and shoved into storage.

Instead they hope to continue inspiring future generations of scientists and nature-lovers by taking it on tour around the UK -- and they‘re looking for venues for it to visit.

"For many of us, that first glimpse of Dippy was a formative moment in our childhood, evoking awe and a genuine wonder at the natural world," explained museum director Michael Dixon.

He said he hoped taking the 21.3-meter long, 4.25-meter high skeleton to all corners of England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland would "prompt curiosity and a desire to explore."

Nationwide appeal

The museum has appealed to sites across the country to get in touch if they would like Dippy to stay with them for four to six months at a time, from 2018.

Anyone who offers the 292-bone dinosaur a new home will need to take good care of it -- the skeleton will need to be dismantled and rebuilt at each new location.

"Dippy needs to be handled carefully," Dixon insisted. "It has taken our conservators several months to be sure that, with care and the right systems in place, it would be possible to tour."

The dinosaur will be the largest item the Natural History Museum has ever loaned out for display; Dixon says it is determined to open up its collections and make them more accessible to the public.

MOST READ
Don't miss the big stories. Like us on Facebook.
THE LATEST
Should CCSD start school 30 minutes later?

The Clark County School District launched a survey about starting all schools 30 minutes later. Officials cite research linking later start times to improved performance and lower rates of depression.

What we know about the deadly shooting at a Michigan Mormon church

At least 100 federal investigators are responding to an attack in a Michigan community where a former Marine crashed a pickup into a Mormon church during a Sunday service, shot into the building and set it ablaze.

Government shutdown draws closer as congressional leaders head to White House

Democratic and Republican congressional leaders are heading to the White House for a meeting with President Donald Trump on Monday in a late effort to avoid a government shutdown, but both sides have shown hardly any willingness to budge from their entrenched positions.

MORE STORIES