Dino Dippy prepares for UK tour

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A museum's famous 112-year-old dinosaur is set to leave London for a national tour.

Dippy the diplodocus, a 70ft long (21.3m) plaster-cast sauropod replica made up of 292 bones, is set to leave the Natural History Museum in Kensington later this year.

A six-person team will start a three-and-a-half week task of dismantling of Dippy on Thursday.

He is being moved as the museum is having a front-of-house makeover.

London visitors' last chance to see Dippy ahead of tour


BBC News
4 January 2017


Dippy has been on display at London's Natural History Museum since 1905

A museum's famous 112-year-old dinosaur is set to leave London for a national tour.

Dippy the diplodocus, a 70ft long (21.3m) plaster-cast sauropod replica made up of 292 bones, is set to leave the Natural History Museum in Kensington later this year.

A six-person team will start a three-and-a-half week task of dismantling of Dippy on Thursday.

He is being moved as the museum is having a front-of-house makeover.

Dippy's spot is being taken by the skeleton of an 83ft (25.2m) female blue whale, weighing 4.5 tonnes.

She will take up position in a diving pose as she is suspended from the ceiling of the hall.


Dippy was first installed at the museum in 1905

The whale is also more than 100 years old but - unlike Dippy - she is not a cast.

On Thursday, construction will also begin on a tunnel to protect visitors during the dismantling of Dippy.

This tunnel will take three to four days to build and will almost totally obscure Dippy from view.


About 90 million people are estimated to have seen Dippy


The vast skeleton of a blue whale is now to take centre stage at the museum

Parts of Dippy will be cleaned and repaired ahead of the two-year tour.

The tour will start in 2018, with Dorset County Museum set to be the first stop from February to May.

Dippy will then be on display at the following locations:

Birmingham Museum & Art Gallery - May 2018 to September 2018


Ulster Museum, Belfast - September 2018 to January 2019


Kelvingrove Art Gallery and Museum, Glasgow - January 2019 to May 2019


Great North Museum, Hancock, Newcastle - May 2019 to October 2019


National Assembly for Wales, Cardiff - October 2019 to January 2020


Number One Riverside, Rochdale - February 2020 to June 2020


Norwich Cathedral - July 2020 to October 2020


The Dippy story

Dippy the diplodocus was unveiled to the public in 1905


It is cast from a diplodocus specimen found in America in 1898, the bones of which were acquired by Scottish-born millionaire businessman Andrew Carnegie


During the reconstruction of the skeleton at the Carnegie Museum, it was found to be a different species from the two other diplodocus species known at the time and was named Diplodocus Carnegii in honour of its owner


Carnegie commissioned a replica of the dinosaur after King Edward VII saw a sketch of the dinosaur while visiting Carnegie at his Scottish castle and remarked how much he would like a similar specimen for the Natural History Museum


Dippy is one of 10 replicas of the original Diplodocus carnegii in museums around the world


During World War II, Dippy was disassembled and relocated to the basement to protect it from bomb damage


In 1979 Dippy made the move to Hintze Hall, where it remained until 2017

London visitors' last chance to see Dippy ahead of tour - BBC News