Fossils and dinosaurs
Te Papa’s collections and research on dinosaur bones, animals, and plant fossils from past geological ages, and the people involved in the discovery of their remains.
Dinosaurs of Patagonia | Ngā Taniwha o Rūpapa
An astonishing exhibition of the dinosaurs of Patagonia, South America – which included the Patagotitan, one of the most massive creatures ever to walk the planet, life-sized casts, and real fossils up to 230 million years old.
Closed
16 Dec 2023 – 28 Apr 2024
Exhibition Ngā whakaaturanga
Plant fossils in our collection
The herbarium at Te Papa has a collection of around 850 plant fossils from New Zealand and overseas collected by WRB Oliver, Mr HR Thompson, Mr Horace Fyfe, Mr H Hill, Mr M Ongley, and Jean-Claude Stahl among others. Many of these fossils can be seen on Collections Online.
The first giant petrel fossils
In 2017, Taranaki collector Alastair Johnson found the fossil of a giant petrel. Not only was it a complete skull but it was the first fossil ever found of an intriguing kind of seabird. Two years later, Alastair found part of a wing bone of a giant petrel too. Both fossils are 3 million years old.
Iguanodon tooth – Tales from Te Papa episode 12
This fossil iguanodontid tooth is one of the first fossils ever to be recognised as a dinosaur and its discovery contributed to the beginning of dinosaur studies. The latest research suggests that the tooth probably isn’t Iguanodon, but in that related group, an iguanodontid and is 132 to 137 million years old.
Is that a dinosaur in my cereal?
This set of plastic dinosaur figurines is part of a larger collection of toys played with by Christine Kiddey in New Zealand in the 1950s and 60s. The figures, from packets of cereal, probably Weetbix or Rice Bubbles, were collected and played with by many New Zealand children.