Show.me.uk - the children's section of the 24 Hour Museum.
Pick a topic
News
Games and Fun
Places to go
show and tell
Get in touch
Parents
Teachers
About Us
The Big Draw

  Webby Awards Nominee logo

  The British Academy Award is based on a design by Mitzi Cunliffe
Show.me.uk - the children's section of the 24 Hour Museum. Show.me.uk - the children's section of the 24 Hour Museum. March 12 2010
Accessibility | Site Map
We show you cool stuff from the UK's museums and galleries
Home  > News  > Diplodocus Toe Bone Found On Beach
 

Diplodocus Toe Bone Found On Beach

August 20 2004

A fossil collector has found a fossilized Diplodocus toe bone on the beach at Bexhill in Sussex, proof perhaps that these enormous dinosaurs once lived on this side of the Atlantic Ocean.

Shows a photo of Frank Hamill measuring a fossil of a dinosaur tooth and smiling.

Photo: Frank's all smiles over his latest discovery.

Courtesy of Alan Jones, The Brighton Argus.

Diplodocus is the name given to a huge plant-eating dinosaur which lived between 155 and 145 million years ago and belonged to the 'sauropod' family of dinosaurs.

This is the first time any Diplodocus remains have been found in Britain. Most Diplodocus fossils have been found in America, though other sauropod fossils have been found on the Isle of Wight, just off the English south coast.

Photo: the toe bone is so big, Frank needs something bigger to measure it with!

Courtesy of Alan Jones, The Brighton Argus.

Shows a photo of Frank Hamill measuring a fossil of a dinosaur tooth.

The fossil was found by a collector called Frank Hamill. He spoke to the local newspaper, The Brighton Argus, about his find and told them:

"I'm absolutely over the moon to have discovered this. I didn't know what it was at first. I knew it was a fossil and possibly a dinosaur but it was only when we sent it away that I realised its significance....this is the best find I have ever made."

Experts believe this Diplodocus would have weighed about 30 tonnes and been up to 30 metres long.

To find out more about this huge animal, take a look at the Diplodocus Data File from the Natural History Museum. If you live anywhere near London, there's a whole Diplodocus skeleton on display at the Museum too.

Shows a black and white drawing of a diplodocus.

Photo: If the toe bone is that big, how big was its owner?!

Copyright: Natural History Museum, London.

Frank has donated the toe bone to Bexhill Museum where it is on display in their permanent collection.

Anra Kennedy