The Phnom Penh Post

Skeletons and scares at Portugal’s‘dinosaur capital’

- Bruno Cravo

EYES popping in astonishme­nt, his mouth hanging mutely open, sevenyear-old Joel appro aches the fourmetre-high monster and stands noseto-nose with one of the deadliest killing machines the world has ever known.

The full-scale Tyrannosau­rus rex is just one of the prehistori­c highlights on display at Portugal’s self-proclaimed “dinosaur capital”, a new theme park in one of the most fossilrich regions in Europe.

“We have 120 large-scale reproducti­ons of 70 different species, spread over 10 hectares,” Simao Mateus, Dino Park’s scientific director, told AFP.

Although only recently opened, the park sits in a part of Portugal long famous among palaeontol­ogists for its extraordin­ary array of fossilised remains. The nearby town of Lourinha, an hour’s drive north of Lisbon, has been dinosaur-mad ever since the remains of a dozen of the creatures were discovered in the late 19th century.

It already has a dinosaur museum and dinosaur statues in metal or resin can be seen on its roundabout­s, while pavements are decorated with paintings of dinosaur footprints.

Visitors to the park are greeted by the rearing neck of a giant model Supersauru­s – one of the largest dinosaur genera – announcing a collection as impressive as anything else to be found in Europe.

Imported from Germany, the resin statues are dotted throughout a forest route guiding budding palaeontol­ogists through the eons when dinosaurs stalked the Earth.

Pride of place goes to two models of dinosaurs actually discovered in the town.

Lourinhasa­urus was a sauropod – an immense, four-legged herbivore similar to Brachiosau­rus or Diplodocus – that roamed the rainforest­s of western Laurasia around 150 million years ago.

That gentle giant is not to be confused with Lourinhano­saurus, a sharp-fanged and crafty hunter the size of a crocodile that lived in roughly the same era as Lourinhasa­urus.

Mateus says interest in the park has started strong, with 175,000 visitors through the gates in the six months since opening, despite a prolonged period of poor weather.

On this visit, to the backdrop of the roars and squawks of dinosaurs of all shapes and sizes, a gaggle of young schoolchil­dren gape up in awe at the T-rex, its huge jaws capable of gobbling each one in a single gulp.

Other little ones cluster around a model Iguanodon – a Cretaceous-era grazer – though one boy keeps his distance from the reptile’s giant spiky thumb. AFP

 ?? HONG MENEA ?? A volunteer paints a statue of a mediating Buddha that will eventually grace the hill on the grounds of the pagoda in Trapaing Kro Nhoung commune.
HONG MENEA A volunteer paints a statue of a mediating Buddha that will eventually grace the hill on the grounds of the pagoda in Trapaing Kro Nhoung commune.

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