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Philadelphia: Franklin Institute double premiere: Giant Mysterious Dinosaurs exhibit and "Flying Monsters" 3D giant screen movie

The exhibit was created by Don Lessem and ExhibitsRex and produced by Imagine Exhibitions, Inc. Premiering simultaneously in The Franklin Institute’s Tuttleman 4.5 story-high IMAX Theater is “Flying Monsters 3D,” from Atlantic Productions, in association with Sky 3D, and distributed by National Geographic Entertainment.

“Flying Monsters 3D” image courtesy National Geographic

 PHILADELPHIA, Dec. 7, 2011 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ — One of the world’s largest collections highlighting the biggest dinosaurs ever stampedes into The Franklin Institute this Saturday, December 10 in the world premiere exhibition Giant Mysterious Dinosaurs. This exclusive exhibition gets visitors up-close-and-personal with GIGANTIC dinosaurs, as long as 70 feet, excavated from such remote regions as Argentina and the Gobi Desert of Inner Mongolia. Giant Mysterious Dinosaurs will be in The Franklin Institute’s Mandell Center beginning Saturday, December 10, with special extended holiday hours and free parking on New Year’s Day to qualified ticket-buyers and Franklin Institute members. The exhibit runs through April 15, 2012

Highlights include the world premiere of a cast skeleton of the never-before-displayed Mapusaurus, 65 million year-old dinosaur eggs, and the latest scientific evidence of how dinosaurs grew so large. Dozens of exotic giant skeletons and intricate robotics reveal new discoveries of dinosaur origins and behavior, while casting light on the unfamiliar international ancestors of familiar North American dinosaurs. The exhibit gathers two dozen humongous skeletons, dinosaur recreations and full-sized robotics. Visitors can also get hands-on by going on a dino dig and examining fossils and bone replicas in the interactive Dinosaur Cart, which will be staffed by museum science interpreters during daytime exhibit hours.

The spectacular collection belongs to the world’s leading dinosaur collector and popularizer, Don Lessem. “Dino” Don, a Philadelphia area resident, who has excavated and re-created dinosaurs from Argentina to Mongolia, including the world’s largest meat-eater and plant-eater. He was advisor to the movie Jurassic Park, host and writer of NOVA and Discovery Channel documentaries, and has written more than 50 books for children. Mr. Lessem’s company, ExhibitsRex, Inc., designed and built the Giant Mysterious Dinosaurs exhibition. As dinosaur editor for Highlights Magazine, Dino Don has answered more than 11,000 letters from children. Dino Don, who holds the largest private collection of dinosaurs in the world, lives in Media, PA surrounded by the actual dinosaur sculptures from the Jurassic Park movie.

The exhibition highlights recent cutting-edge research that answers one of the bigger mysteries about large dinosaurs – how on earth did they get so big? Turns out, the big plant-eaters required thousands of kilograms of food daily to survive – so they sped up the process by swallowing their meals whole. If you thought you knew dinosaurs, Giant Mysterious Dinosaurs will open your eyes. Nearly half of all dinosaurs known have been found in the last two decades – many from the farthest reaches of the globe. And along with these recent findings come new insights into how dinosaurs grew, behaved, communicated, and, after 163 million years of domination, came to a crashing end.

Meet Mapusaurus, the new king of the meat-eating dinosaurs and Mamenchisaurus, (MA-men-CHEE-sore-us) the longest-necked (and most pea-headed) animal that ever lived. Get introduced to one of the largest meat-eating dinosaurs – Giganotosaurus from Patagonia, 10% bigger than T. rex. See one of the world’s largest dinosaur bones – the five-foot high backbone of the 100-ton Argentinosaurus. Puzzle over the unicorn spike on the school-bus sized duckbilled dinosaur Tsintaosaurus (TZINT-ow-SORE-us), the two-foot long spines of the bizarre Amargasaurus, and the world’s longest claw – nearly two feet long – from a still-unknown Mongolian giant meat-eater. Many of these enormous dinosaurs have rarely been displayed in North America.

FLYING MONSTERS
Also on December 10, The Franklin Institute’s Tuttleman 4.5 story-high IMAX Theater will premiere “Flying Monsters,” a new adventure film from award-winning Atlantic Productions, in association with Sky 3D, and distributed by National Geographic Entertainment. The film, which opens in conjunction with “Giant Mysterious Dinosaurs exhibition,” uses CGI technology to immerse audiences in a prehistoric world inhabited by pterosaurs, flying vertebrates with a wingspan of up to 45 feet that lived alongside dinosaurs. “Flying Monsters” was produced by filmmaker Anthony Geffen and narrated by veteran filmmaker and renowned naturalist Sir David Attenborough.

About The Franklin Institute
Located in the heart of Philadelphia, The Franklin Institute is a renowned and innovative leader in the field of science and technology learning, as well as a dynamic center of activity. Pennsylvania’s most visited museum, it is dedicated to creating a passion for learning about science by offering access to hands-on science education. For more information, visit www.fi.edu.

Judith Rubin
Judith Rubin
Judith Rubin ([email protected]) is a leading journalist, content marketing specialist and connector in the international attractions industry. She reports on design and technical design, production and project management, industry trends and company culture. From 2005-2020 she ran communications and publications for the Themed Entertainment Association (TEA). In 2013, she was honored with the TEA Service Award. She was development director of IMERSA and publicist for the Large Format Cinema Association, and has contributed to the publications of PLASA, IAAPA and the International Planetarium Society. Judith joined World’s Fair magazine in 1987, which introduced her to the attractions industry. She joined InPark in 2010. Judith earned a BFA from Pratt Institute. She has lived in Detroit, New York, Oakland, and now Saint Louis, where she is active in the local arts community.

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