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"Ice Dinosaurs was a perfect fit for our mission, which is why I jumped on to book it nearly two years before its release! We were the world premiere venue, and it lived up to the hype. This was the most beautiful and complex exhibition we have ever rented, and the support from the team at Imagine minimized the impact of maintenance issues..."

- Anthony Mortimer, Vice President of Education and Exhibits

Ice Dinosaurs: The Lost World of the Alaskan Arctic

This new traveling exhibition features newly discovered Arctic-dwelling dinosaurs never-before-seen in an exhibition. Built around groundbreaking discoveries expanding the traditional understanding of dinosaur physiology, provinciality, and migration, Ice Dinosaurs invites visitors to learn about the unique adaptations of polar dinosaurs while interacting with real fossils and museum-grade casts.

Created in collaboration with world-renowned dinosaur paleontologist Dr. Gregory M. Erickson and Dr. Patrick Druckenmiller, Ice Dinosaurs transports visitors to the Late Cretaceous period above the Arctic Circle, where dinosaurs lived year-round in extreme polar environments.


Challenging long-held beliefs in the scientific community of dinosaurs as cold-blooded, reptilian, and tropical-dwelling, Ice Dinosaurs uses immersive scenery, interactive elements, and educational concepts to unveil the unprecedented scientific evidence that warm-blooded, non-migratory dinosaurs thrived above the Arctic Circle.


Ice Dinosaurs is based on the research of paleontologists Dr. Gregory M. Erickson, and Dr. Patrick Druckenmiller, co-Directors if the Arctic Paleo-Research Consortium (APRC), a multi-national group of professional and citizen scientists who seek to unravel the mysteries of dinosaurian polar occupation. Portions of the profits from this exhibition will be donated to the APRC to continue this groundbreaking research.

highlights:
  • Scientists have recently discovered a new species of dinosaurs, including a giant species of feathered raptors that sheds its feathers and re-grows them through its life cycle. 

  • Arctic dinosaurs were non-migratory and appear to have been warm-blooded and endothermic, which challenges our understanding of dinosaur physiology, provinciality, and migration.

  • Paleontologists working in the Arctic Circle must face extreme working conditions while conducting their scientific research.

details

footprint
  • 6,000 - 10,000 sq. ft.

  • 560 - 930 sq. m.


language support
  • English

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Ice Dinosaurs: The Lost World of the Alaskan Arctic
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