"We've now expanded this world where it's not just InGen, it's not just Biosyn" - the companies trying to clone dinosaurs. "This one I might take credit for," Kreamer says. But Camp Cretaceous season 4 will bring us our first cloned saber-toothed tiger on screen in the Jurassic franchise. The original Jurassic Park saw a saber-toothed tiger plushie in the gift shop, while the Lockwood Mansion in Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom held a skull of the beast. So not only is it all the fear of dinosaurs and now robots, but it's also fear of the unknown." "Now thanks to mosasaurus, they've been thrown into this whole new world where they don't know why things are happening, who's behind it. They've only survived because they know how the dinosaurs are going to behave or they know what this situation is," he continues. "It's almost like Darius mentioned in season 3 about the Scorpius Rex. "We've done 26 episodes of kids running away from dinosaurs in the jungle, so what can we do that still feels like it's part of the overall story but that changes things up, ups the ante, ups the threat to the kids?" he says. That, Kreamer says, came out of the writers' room. The tundra one in particular comes with a robot that happens to look like a dinosaur. The trailer also finds the group interacting with a facility that appears to project different environments using holograms, from icy tundras to deserts. "Those are some of the questions that we're going to start digging into." "I think what it comes down to is who and why?" Kreamer says. And if there are drones, that means someone is operating them. The first bots we see are drones herding a dinosaur (the same kind of drones we saw tailing the Scorpius Rex in season 3). So until we know if they have managed it we won't know when (or if) the books are coming out - we can track it (and back it, if you like what you see) here through looks like we'll find out on Thu, Apr 10 2014.Wherever the kids now find themselves, it's an island of robots. Some crowd funding thing which is apparently massive (although I had no idea such a thing existed tbh) - people who want to see the project succeed make a pledge for support and pass on the link to their friends and family.īUT it's a bit 'Dragon's Den'-ish, in that if they don't get pledges for all the funding the project needs in the time specified (26 days to go) they get nothing. Not sure when they'll be available to buy as Nicky, the author, has hooked up with a company called Kickstarter. Lots of lovely images, here's one I borrowed from the Facebook page. It's called "The Ultimate Beginners' Guide to Dinosaurs" and I'm told there are 23 books (lots of present potential for grandparents!), 20 about indi dinos and 3 about special stuff - like the mass extinction, what a fossil is made of (apparently not bone!) and the descendants of the dinos (is the chicken related to T. It seems my info is more 'hot off the press' than I thought as the series isn't out yet, but should be soon. You learn a lot about these dinosaurs but there's no head ripping off gore type stuff that walking with Dino's/beasts/monsters/planet dinosaur etc has. It's a sort of documentary style fiction thing where Nigel Marvin goes back through the 'time portal' to bring various dinosaurs back to the present day to make a dinosaur zoo. I know you haven't asked for DVD recommendations.but my two absolutely love Nigel Marvin's prehistoric park. Different dinosaurs making a swimming pool.Ĭaptain Flynn and the pirate dinosaurs (pirates and dinosaurs!) If dinosaurs were alive today - Dougal Dixonĭinosaur art - more for older kids but fab graphics if he loves looking at the picsĭinosaur dig.not babyish exactly but might be on this cusp. Viewfinder: fossils by Douglas Palmer (comes with little magnifier)ĭinosaurs by Steve brusatte and Michael Benton (huge eat book, would be great for 5+ to be read to.massive pictures, good info. Others that are good for older kids to read 8+ or younger to look at pictures - my ds had several of these books from 5-6+ Usborne big book of dinosaurs or inside the world of dinosaurs (both of these are probably most age appropriate for 5+ but not babyish)
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