Dinosaurs at Crystal Palace: Welcome to Victorian Park

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Jago Hazzard

Jago Hazzard

10 ай бұрын

The first 100 people to use code HAZZARD at the link below will get 60% off of Incogni: incogni.com/hazzard
Life, uh, finds a way... to South London.
Friends of Crystal Palace Dinosaurs: cpdinosaurs.org
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Patreon: / jagohazzard

Пікірлер: 251
@princecharon
@princecharon 10 ай бұрын
Fun fact: The ducks and other birds at the park are technically also Crystal Palace Dinosaurs, just more accurate ones.
@trevorelliston1
@trevorelliston1 10 ай бұрын
It’s these odd explorations that are so delightful, and set Jago apart as not just a train nerd but a social historian.
@midnightmosesuk
@midnightmosesuk 10 ай бұрын
All this is just down the road from me. Crystal Palace Park has been a part of my life for so many years. My nan used to tell me about how she saw the sky glowing when the palace burnt down from her back garden in Peckham. My mum and dad used to go there when they were courting and, after they got married, they took me there when I was little. There I would climb and sit on the Guy the Gorilla statue, visit the zoo and, of course, stare at the dinosaurs around the lake. Then, about 30 years later, I did the same with my daughter, though the Zoo was no longer there. Funny how life moves in cycles like this. Oh, and you can tell Richard Owen is a wrong 'un just be looking at his photo. Shifty looking bugger.
@ZGryphon
@ZGryphon 10 ай бұрын
In _A Short History of Nearly Everything,_ Bill Bryson noted a grisly postscript to the Mantell-Owen rivalry: after Mantell's death from a probably-intentional laudanum overdose, after years of chronic pain from injuries suffered in a carriage accident, his misshapen spinal column was placed in the museum of the Royal College of Surgeons... which was directed by Richard Owen at the time. As Bryson wrote of Owen, "He was the only person Charles Darwin was ever known to hate."
@ludovica8221
@ludovica8221 10 ай бұрын
I absolutely loved this, My dad was an eminent palaeontologist and an Hon assoc curator of Oxford Uni museum of natural history. (and an expert on Mantell Darwin and Lyell.) We used to go here a lot when we were just tiny. Richard Owen is a pantomime baddie to me He is the Yerkes of paleontology and hogged all the credit
@KevinTheCaravanner
@KevinTheCaravanner 10 ай бұрын
Richard Owen can’t have been a bad guy coz he didn’t have a moustache whereas Yerkes did.
@ludovica8221
@ludovica8221 10 ай бұрын
@@KevinTheCaravanner He wore his on the inside... extra sneaky
@iankemp1131
@iankemp1131 10 ай бұрын
The parallel to Yerkes seems good. But like Yerkes, Owen also got things done and was good at popularisation (or marketing). He was instrumental in the founding of the Natural History Museum, an interesting parallel to the Yerkes Observatory.
@PenryMMJ
@PenryMMJ 10 ай бұрын
To be fair, the little animatronic duck sculptures look very realistic.😁
@PokhrajRoy.
@PokhrajRoy. 10 ай бұрын
Quote of the Day: “Scientific Progress means getting someone’s elbow in your soup.”
@dodgydruid
@dodgydruid 10 ай бұрын
My best friends grandfather, a Victor Martin after WW2 would go and work on these for free if he had building supplies left over from his job as they were damaged during the war and no money to keep them repaired. Vic was one of them larger than life characters, great man to know and he didn't have a bad bone in his body and even when he went blind he still wiled his hours away making silk poppies out of silk and copper wire to be sold for charity. He hailed from Crystal Palace and was quite a well known chap back in the day.
@michaeldarby3503
@michaeldarby3503 10 ай бұрын
Thank you Mr Hazzard, there is a special place in my heart for Crystal Palace. I spent most of 1970 living with my Grandmother in a place I think was called Annerly, and spent many weekends and holidays playing in the park with my Cousins, definately the happiest days of my life.
@gdclemo
@gdclemo 10 ай бұрын
Anerley. It's just down the road from Crystal Palace park.
@caw25sha
@caw25sha 10 ай бұрын
In his avatar Jago looks like Richard Attenborough in Jurassic Park.
@CharlesTysonYerkesOfficial
@CharlesTysonYerkesOfficial 10 ай бұрын
Ah yes Dinosaurs, they predate my time by a few years.
@chrischibnall593
@chrischibnall593 10 ай бұрын
I visited the dinosaurs a few years ago with some old college friends, one of whom had qualified in Geology. On the way home, we got lost amongst the Victorian terraced streets nearby. My friend remarked: "I've just noticed something: all the streets around here are named after famous geologists".
@EgonDaLatz
@EgonDaLatz 10 ай бұрын
I remember seeing these sculptures from the "Making of Walking with Dinosaurs" back from the late 90s. So when I visited with my brother 20 years later, we went there on purpose and knew what to look for. Thanks for the reminder and the fascinating backstory! 🙂
@edgarmark909
@edgarmark909 10 ай бұрын
My dad (a mosaic and tile expert!) worked on the restoration of the Crystal Palace dinosaurs in about the year 2000. He got me an illustrated book about the life of Waterhouse Hawkins which became my favourite book. He also brought back a few lumps of fossilised wood which decorate the dinosaur enclosure.
@proper_charlie
@proper_charlie 10 ай бұрын
My specialist subject! There are two iguanodons at Crystal Palace. One based on Owen's suggested anatomy and posture and the other according to Mantell's. Guess which iguanodon cast they had the dinner in? That dinner was held on New Year's Eve 1853. Must have been a bit parky. They got to and from it by travelling on the newly constructed but not yet opened WELCPR - the park and everything in it were the brainchild of Leo Schuster, railwayman, who was also present in the dinosaur cast alongside the newspapermen and geologists. Amazing PR.. Mantell by that point was dead, buried in West Norwood cemetery, just over a mile away, over Gypsy Hill. Mantelll had scoliosis and died of a self-administered opium overdose because the pain was too great. Owen kept Mantell's twisted spine, removed at his post-mortem, preserved in formaldehyde at the Hunterian museum. He toasted Mantell at the dinner, while seated at the head of his own iguanodon model. When you do the Crystal Palace video are you going to cover the atmospheric railway and the buried ghost train urban legend?
@hatjodelka
@hatjodelka 10 ай бұрын
A trip to West Norwood cemetery is always worth it. So many interesting people interred there.
@sofa-lofa4241
@sofa-lofa4241 10 ай бұрын
I had heard about the dinner party held inside it, must have been an interesting evening! Thanks for the further info
@rogerwells6807
@rogerwells6807 10 ай бұрын
Another splendid departure. More please.
@philipgibbard304
@philipgibbard304 10 ай бұрын
As a scientist I must remember your quote "scientific progress means getting someone’s elbow in your soup"!
@robertb7918
@robertb7918 10 ай бұрын
In the 1960s Crystal Palace Park was a favourite destination for days out with my parents. On one junior school trip we went to the park and on to the Natural History Museum to study dinosaurs. Back then the amount that was known about the creatures was miniscule compared to today.
@kenmorris100
@kenmorris100 10 ай бұрын
Thanks again Jago for memories. After graduating from in 1972 I returned to London to work. I rented a bed-sit close to the Park and regularly walked around looking at the dinosaurs and at that time there was also a flock of flamingos. During my stay there were plans to close/remove the Dinosaurs and I joined in a group protesting to save them which lead to their proper recognition and now restoration. I often recommend a trip to see them to visitors to London as a get away from the tourist spots in W1 and EC1.
@63sgjunior
@63sgjunior 10 ай бұрын
Disappointed. I was expecting the dinosaurs to be on rails. 😂😂
@NickyMitchell85
@NickyMitchell85 10 ай бұрын
😂 😂 😂 😂 🤣 🤣 🤣 🤣
@brettpalfrey4665
@brettpalfrey4665 10 ай бұрын
Standard or Broad Gauge?
@atraindriver
@atraindriver 10 ай бұрын
@@brettpalfrey4665 Narrow. The dinosaurs hadn't yet invented horses, so had nothing to base the gauge on. ;)
@alanbudgen2672
@alanbudgen2672 10 ай бұрын
As a child I had this vague memory of seeing dinosaurs in a park. I sort of remembered what they looked like, but wasn't sure if I'd dreamt the experience. Some time later I discovered they did exist and it wasn't a dream after all. They are great.
@highpath4776
@highpath4776 10 ай бұрын
"The Current head is a replica and the original displayed quite prominently nearby" Have you been round my flat again Jago ?
@AnnabelSmyth
@AnnabelSmyth 10 ай бұрын
Back in the 1980s, I used to come here occasionally with my daughter, and the dinosaurs were much more freely accessible than they are now - you could pat them, or even climb on them if you were so minded. Bringing her sons here, several decades later, was almost disappointing, although I am glad that they are so well looked after.
@PokhrajRoy.
@PokhrajRoy. 10 ай бұрын
I remember Max Miller from ‘Tasting History’ who had a whole episode on the Dinosaur Craze in Victorian England and the banquet ( 7:01 ) held in the replica of a dinosaur.
@AnnabelSmyth
@AnnabelSmyth 10 ай бұрын
Yes, and not very long ago, either.
@bowiearcangeli11
@bowiearcangeli11 10 ай бұрын
I saw that episode too. It was very interesting!
@ukuleletyke
@ukuleletyke 10 ай бұрын
That confused me enormously until I realised I was thinking of the wrong Max Miller. I couldn’t quite come to terms with a bloke in silk plus fours and a white hat going “‘Ere, ‘ere” whilst pointing at dinosaurs.
@23Stork
@23Stork 10 ай бұрын
I wish I could eat inside the Diner-saur
@genenomidic1393
@genenomidic1393 10 ай бұрын
Fun Dino fact, in the early days of palaeontology there were two broad classifications of dinosaur - Lizard Hipped and Bird Hipped, the Bird Hipped became extinct and the Lizard Hipped evolved into birds 🤦‍♂️
@jasonschubert6828
@jasonschubert6828 10 ай бұрын
As a child I had a "Book of Monsters" that had all the details of these, probably still have the book. When I was working in London (without mentioning details of the hosp... employer), I had an arsehole boss who sent me down near Crystal Palace without a taxi voucher. Needless to say, i spent some time visiting my childhood heroes and blamed the tube for my extended absence!
@markellis6413
@markellis6413 10 ай бұрын
My first ever school trip was to Crystal Palace Park. Saw the dinosaurs, rode on a donkey. Day ended dramatically when a boy fell and cut his knee open on a piece of glass hidden in the grass. Had to go by ambulance to hospital to get it stitched while the rest of us got the 12A bus back to school.. Crystal Palace Park is a fascinating place..
@nomorehierros
@nomorehierros 10 ай бұрын
I have put together a talk about the history of the Crystal Palace, a few months ago someone at the talk who grew up in the area told me that many shards of glass from the palace remained embedded in the ground and it was an extreemly hazardous patch of land!
@glynwelshkarelian3489
@glynwelshkarelian3489 10 ай бұрын
More than usually splendid! Will you be doing Crystal Palace Stadium's history? It hosted the FA Cup final from 1895 to 1914. Teams that won the Cup there include Bury, so extinction could be a linking thread to this videos.
@dodgydruid
@dodgydruid 10 ай бұрын
Don't forget the almost intact race circuit too, abolished when moody Bromley council took over and said nyetski to anything like having fun.
@glynwelshkarelian3489
@glynwelshkarelian3489 10 ай бұрын
@@dodgydruid Do you mean motor racing? The National Sports Centre's still there.
@quacky1874
@quacky1874 10 ай бұрын
@@dodgydruid There is also a 1/6th scale remote control car race circuit just behind the swimming pool.
@sihaz1969
@sihaz1969 10 ай бұрын
@@glynwelshkarelian3489 Yes he means motor racing! There was regular proper motor racing in a circuit around the where the stadium and sports centre are now. The turnstiles near the bridge over to the sports centre from the south of the park are where you would enter to watch the cars. Most of the circuit is still there as paths to meander along.
@NickyMitchell85
@NickyMitchell85 10 ай бұрын
Prehistoric life in Jagoland.
@isashax
@isashax 10 ай бұрын
What a fab departure from the usual theme. Loved it!
@jean-pierredeclemy7032
@jean-pierredeclemy7032 10 ай бұрын
I expect you have already covered the now lost underground railway from Crystal Palace that worked on atmospheric pressure or something. It didn't last long because rats kept chewing through the leather vacuum seals. At least that is what I was told. Thought I would mention it in case you hadn't heard of it.
@phaasch
@phaasch 10 ай бұрын
"... they teach us that science is forever moving forward, and also that it can be made to serve an agenda" Wise words, Jago, and something that is becoming ever more apparent these days. Really looking forward to your feature on the Palace, proper.
@ronalddevine9587
@ronalddevine9587 10 ай бұрын
Another well done video. You had a beautiful day for your recording.
@dukeofaaghisle7324
@dukeofaaghisle7324 10 ай бұрын
That the Crystal Palace “dinosaurs” are on a par with the Palace of Westminster sounds about right to me.
@christopherames5650
@christopherames5650 10 ай бұрын
A childhood family walk in Maidstone passed Benstead's or iguanadon quarry where Mantell investigated bones found by the owner which comprised a more complete iguanadon skeleton in 1834. Mantell purchased the skeleton for £25 for the natural history museum. A consequence is that Maidstone now has an iguanadon as a supporter to its coat of arms.
@stevecooksley
@stevecooksley 10 ай бұрын
Is this connected to why there's a dinosaur in Cobtree Manor Park?
@goodwood-rc4nx
@goodwood-rc4nx 10 ай бұрын
Nan lived in penge so visited the park often and also enjoyed a few classical concerts at the rusty laptop stage but not been there since she passed
@TalesOfWar
@TalesOfWar 10 ай бұрын
I always love the ad reads Mr Hazzard produces.
@peterdavy6110
@peterdavy6110 10 ай бұрын
Grew up round there and glad to know they are still around!
@ThePalaeontologist
@ThePalaeontologist 10 ай бұрын
It is all part of the grand history of Palaeontology and the evolution of Palaeoart. It all has it's place.
@chrissaltmarsh6777
@chrissaltmarsh6777 10 ай бұрын
I lived in a flat near there, ages ago. In the age of slam-door commuting. (Train reference) The 'dinosaur' sculptures - which were a lot raggier in those days - were indeed hilarious. There was a little petting zoo as well; I got bit by a horse,
@caw25sha
@caw25sha 10 ай бұрын
Next to the cavalry horses in Whitehall there is a warning sign saying they may kick or bite. That's all I know about horses and it's all anyone needs to know.
@theimperialist2686
@theimperialist2686 10 ай бұрын
Would be kind of funny if someone built a big statue of Godzilla there.
@daveherbert6215
@daveherbert6215 10 ай бұрын
Hail, Hail Mantle. Boo to Owen. Well done Jago. I seem to remember a giant Sloth climbing a tree, its pose was suggestive. It has now disappeared. The tree that was holding the sloth up was going to fall down. 😊
@JagoHazzard
@JagoHazzard 10 ай бұрын
It’s back, but it’s not easy to see. I think it’s in a couple of shots.
@robertfletcher3421
@robertfletcher3421 10 ай бұрын
There are some very interesting, hidden places in London
@AnnabelSmyth
@AnnabelSmyth 10 ай бұрын
It's not that hidden - it's just not Central London! But very easily accessible from there, though.
@highpath4776
@highpath4776 10 ай бұрын
I trust you will be covering the Television museum at Crystal Palace (and coverage of the markets around Westow Hill will be rewarding too). Going somewhere to the north westish of Crystal Palace Parade etc down the hill toward Dulwich , or indeed the glorious Horniman Museum and park gives lots of interesting stuff south of the river , you know they even build railways to enable easier access to get here (but life has never been the same since the trolleybuses were withdrawn)
@msg5507
@msg5507 10 ай бұрын
Just as I comment on an old Streets of London video that Jago should go off the rails a bit and revisit some of these gems, this appears. Brilliant!
@frippp66
@frippp66 10 ай бұрын
we took our dog round Crystal Palace park & he kept barking furiously at the dinosaurs - it was so sweet
@Ro99
@Ro99 10 ай бұрын
A bit different but I really enjoyed this one. I also found myself agreeing with most of your general comments and takes
@WildRover1964
@WildRover1964 10 ай бұрын
Lived 300 yards from there for 10 years until the early noughties so, close to my heart. There seem to be a couple of new things and also the area seems to be be more luxuriantly foliaged which makes it look more wild and prehistoric. I mostly remember obnoxious crowds with prams and dogs.
@terrycostin7259
@terrycostin7259 10 ай бұрын
Bit left field for you mate , excellently narrated as usual , them dinosaurs scared the poop out of me when my parents took me there as a toddler in the early 60s .
@femcymoedd535
@femcymoedd535 10 ай бұрын
I grew up near Crystal Palace and spent many happy hours in the park looking at the dinosaurs. Thank you for posting this so I can introduce friends to my childhood.
@Robert-ht7om
@Robert-ht7om 8 ай бұрын
I always wanted a movie or mini series based on all this, the discovery of dinosaurs, just imagining what it would be like to not only discover long lost creatures, but to then try and convince everyone that they're real and going against the church at a time were most people sided with the church and completely believed them, probably best as a mini series so we could jump from one age to another making new discoveries and correcting old ideas.
@gadaboutwalks
@gadaboutwalks 10 ай бұрын
Owen was the founding director of the Natural History Museum but thankfully his statue there is now in a suitably gloomy side alcove.
@brettpalfrey4665
@brettpalfrey4665 10 ай бұрын
Wow!! Sir Richard Owen sounds like another rogue in the mould of a certain American Entrepreneur who features a lot on this channel!! Nice vid ,Jago! looking forward to the video on Crystal Palace...
@bentilbury2002
@bentilbury2002 10 ай бұрын
Yeah, he was not at all a nice man.
@JohnyG29
@JohnyG29 10 ай бұрын
@@bentilbury2002 I actually think he gets a rather unfair vilification these days.
@sampetrie340
@sampetrie340 10 ай бұрын
I recently visited the exhibit on a trip to the UK. The park is lovely, and the “dinosaurs” interested me ever since reading about them as a child. Well worth a visit!
@grahamarmfield8513
@grahamarmfield8513 10 ай бұрын
Both my parents used to live in the area, and tell me that around the time of the 2nd world war they used to sneak inside the larger dinosaurs with friends to have picnics, etc.
@andrewemery4272
@andrewemery4272 10 ай бұрын
When I was a small boy you were allowed to sit on them and play. I remember them as moving, though.... It WAS a long time ago.
@SamanthaWritesThings
@SamanthaWritesThings 10 ай бұрын
Dammit now I won't know true peace in this life until I attend a banquet in a half-completed dinosaur mould.
@JagoHazzard
@JagoHazzard 10 ай бұрын
Let’s open a themed restaurant!
@SamanthaWritesThings
@SamanthaWritesThings 10 ай бұрын
@@JagoHazzard I think we'll have to!
@gloxton
@gloxton 10 ай бұрын
Nothing about the Meglosaurus getting vandalised three years ago and having to have a modern facelift?
@campingstoveman
@campingstoveman 10 ай бұрын
Thank you for bringing back my 50/60s childhood, I and my siblings were brought up in Selhurst and the park was regularly visited.
@jarthurs
@jarthurs 10 ай бұрын
I remember visitng these on a school trip in the late 70's, it's good to hear that they're still around and being looked after.
@davidsummer8631
@davidsummer8631 10 ай бұрын
There is a Brett Anderson song called To The Winter where he mentions siting in Crystal Palace with the plastic dinosaurs
@silkyfan
@silkyfan 10 ай бұрын
I remember going there quite often in the very early 70's when I was a kid and seeing these. I also remember going to the motor racing circuit which was also at Crystal Palace.
@Diptera_Larvae
@Diptera_Larvae 10 ай бұрын
The conversation with the dinosaur felt very real 😅
@send2gl
@send2gl 10 ай бұрын
That was fascinating, I was born in London, lived here all my life and did not know Crystal Palace was first erected in Hyde Park then moved to where it is associated with now.
@paulhaynes8045
@paulhaynes8045 10 ай бұрын
Excellent! I really enjoyed that. I knew absolutely nothing about any of this! A trip to Crystal Palace Park is obviously required...
@alejandrayalanbowman367
@alejandrayalanbowman367 10 ай бұрын
Hi Jago from a rather warm Spain (currently 38°.) 'Verrrry interrrresting' as a certain Scotsman used to say in Dad's Army. Some of those sculptures remind me somewhat of some of the old dinosaurs we had as teachers after WWII - too old to go and fight but not too old to confound youngsters with their antiquated ideas.
@johnmurray8428
@johnmurray8428 10 ай бұрын
Not been there since 1969. Thank you, wonderful insight!
@TheWho87
@TheWho87 10 ай бұрын
Great video, I do hope you've got plans to cover some of the railways that were in the park over the years, like the one installed for the Festival of Empire, or the earlier pneumatic railway, which is where the trapped victorian train carriage in a tunnel ghost story seems to originate from.
@hatjodelka
@hatjodelka 10 ай бұрын
There's the remnants (no track I don't think) of a railway that ran down the side of Horniman's Museum and Gardens. I wonder if it connected to Crystal Palace?
@TheWho87
@TheWho87 10 ай бұрын
@@hatjodelka That's from the route of the the high level station, I think the part in the Horniman gardens would be between Lordship Lane and Honor Oak stations. What I was referring to was railways that were within the actual park, the pneumatic railway was thought to run along the north side of the park connecting the higher terrace levels with the lower boating lake near the dinosaurs, there was an archeological dig in the 70s and 80s to try and find it and they found sleepers but the tunnels seem to have been demolished.
@hatjodelka
@hatjodelka 10 ай бұрын
@@TheWho87 Ah, thanks, I understand.
@BroonParker
@BroonParker 10 ай бұрын
Sir Richard has a very striking demeanour. Or is that nightmarish? Who is the real terrifying lizard?
@ianthomson9363
@ianthomson9363 10 ай бұрын
Today (20th July, the day after this video was posted) is the 219th anniversary of Richard Owen's birth. I suspect that only Jago's weekly schedule prevented it being posted today.
@AndrewG1989
@AndrewG1989 10 ай бұрын
London Zoo has replica of dinosaurs dotted all over the zoo. Perhaps that park should be made into a zoo just like at London Zoo in Camden, North London. Fascinating to see how dinosaurs were around millions of years ago before us humans ever existed and changed the whole landscape that we should look after it. And not destroying it with new homes being built on green belt.
@hatjodelka
@hatjodelka 10 ай бұрын
Curiosity is probably the most important human attribute. Stay curious Mr H!
@mrbojangles8133
@mrbojangles8133 10 ай бұрын
they are interesting, they tell us how the victorians saw things & even inaccurate they have a certain something
@1959BB
@1959BB 10 ай бұрын
As much as I enjoy your train and tube based content, I think your 'weird stuff in London' videos may be even better! (Sacrilege!) I'd certainly like to see more of them, pre-pandemic I spent many long days walking the streets to find interesting stories, and there are so many out there! Always well researched and presented too. Thank you Mr Hazzard.
@richardeyers322
@richardeyers322 10 ай бұрын
used to walk round there when younger then push-bike threw the park,what would be interesting would how you got there and back.seeing as there is no under ground near.
@adrianbromfild8624
@adrianbromfild8624 10 ай бұрын
I think this video is an excuse put forward by Jago to go on holiday and possibly visit the Jurassic coast and Lyme Regis with the mention of Mary Anning
@ianthomson9363
@ianthomson9363 10 ай бұрын
I'm going to Lyme Regis on Tuesday- if Mr. Hazzard's also there I'd gladly buy him a pint.
@PokhrajRoy.
@PokhrajRoy. 10 ай бұрын
I loved The final twist in the tale was (chef’s kiss) ❤
@davidpawson7393
@davidpawson7393 10 ай бұрын
I know another guy of current fame that has decades of taking credit for other's work. Claimed he graduated with three degrees at the top of his class, turns out he didn't. Back in prehistoric times when the media brought that to light. The prebidenasourous period if I remember correctly. About 2.8 gabillion tears ago.
@caw25sha
@caw25sha 10 ай бұрын
The soul group?
@TravelWithMeGadget
@TravelWithMeGadget 10 ай бұрын
@jago this is the first video I've seen which I'd rewatch just for the sponsorship message. Masterful - You should win an award!
@alanmoss3603
@alanmoss3603 10 ай бұрын
My mum told me one of these dinosaurs ate our cat - and now you're telling me they are made of concrete???? My whole childhood had been a lie! A LIE I tell you!
@mrb.5610
@mrb.5610 10 ай бұрын
''If only the Geologists would let me alone, I could do very well, but those dreadful Hammers! I hear the clink of them at the end of every cadence of the Bible verses''. John Ruskin Must have been a terrible shock to those brought up on the Bible being literally 'The Gospel Truth'.
@GustavSvard
@GustavSvard 10 ай бұрын
This is one of few landmarks in London I've still got on my list of places to go see. And while I wouldn't want them changed, I would like to see full-scale reconstructions that fully reflect what the experts now think they all looked like. Maybe something for another park? All the same species, plus a few select more, and make them full colour with feathers and all.
@billyshearer117
@billyshearer117 10 ай бұрын
Lived in Crystal Palace for years. Miss it a lot!
@wibblewabblewoo6249
@wibblewabblewoo6249 10 ай бұрын
Other interesting thing about Crystal Palace is definitely the race track. Racing sim RFactor2 has an amazing version of it, if you want to go back in time in VR (the film Rush also refers to it).
@edwardcory608
@edwardcory608 10 ай бұрын
If you want to know how horrible Richard Owen really was, read ‘ The Dinosaur Hunters’ by Deborah Cadbury. Wonderful book!
@PMA65537
@PMA65537 10 ай бұрын
About 50 years ago at primary school we were taught about the iguanadon confusion. They never mentioned the intercostal clavicle though.
@jodypitt3629
@jodypitt3629 10 ай бұрын
Hi Jago, I have some old Kodak transparencies of these creatures from way back and preserved for posterity on a CD.
@caw25sha
@caw25sha 10 ай бұрын
Ironically Kodak transparencies last longer than CDs. I've got some of my grandad's from the early 50s and they are perfect, no fading or discolouring.
@sabinebogensperger1928
@sabinebogensperger1928 10 ай бұрын
Brilliant video, thank you. It's still on my list to visit in London.
@PeterGaunt
@PeterGaunt 10 ай бұрын
Thanks Jago. A good diversion for you. I shall try to give the dinosaurs a visit soon. I'm in north London but can get to Crystal Palace easily - one stop on the Tube then the Overground (what a wonderoud thing the Overground is).
@danielboulton98
@danielboulton98 10 ай бұрын
Love Crystal Palace and travelling there from home as a kid on the endlessly seeming 122 bus
@nathanm5594
@nathanm5594 10 ай бұрын
I recently done the London ultra 55km ultramarathon with a lad from Gibraltar. The route went thru CP park and i had to say if you see dinosaurs don't worry you aren't hallucinating! 😂
@rainyfeathers9148
@rainyfeathers9148 10 ай бұрын
The Creatures of Crystal Palace sounds like a children's book series
@FoxBox72
@FoxBox72 10 ай бұрын
Great video, thanks. Owen did at least one good deed - he helped establish The Natural History Museum in London. Bill Bryson tells the entertainingly shocking story of Mantell Vs Owen in some more detail in his book 'A short History of Nearly Everything'.
@stephenfitzgerald8779
@stephenfitzgerald8779 10 ай бұрын
Thanks for this, loved your commercial!
@davidwong9230
@davidwong9230 10 ай бұрын
I’ve spotted a dinosaur on my bookshelf…it’s a thesaurus 🦖
@roberthuron9160
@roberthuron9160 10 ай бұрын
Mr. Owen,was on a scientific ego-trip,and did much damage along the way! A combination of hubris,and an over arching madness,made him one of the protypes of the mad scientist! One thing,even today,most scientists,cannot admit that they can be wrong,nor apologize for leading the public down the garden path,because of an obviously wrong theory! Remember,that scientist who said that if you went over 30 mph,you would suffocate?? He was totally wrong,but he kept pontificating anyway!! Thank you 😇!
@williamrobinson7435
@williamrobinson7435 10 ай бұрын
Particularly good parting shot "You are the misplaced thumb..etc" this week. Nice one Jago! 👌🌟👍
@iankemp1131
@iankemp1131 10 ай бұрын
Never knew I wanted to go and visit Crystal Palace Park until now. Can't see the link to CP Dinosaurs promised at 9:10 though? The news of the Palaeotherium replica is bang up to date as apparently it was only unveiled on 2 July 2023, less than 3 weeks before this video appeared.
@zackakai5173
@zackakai5173 10 ай бұрын
It's not often my ADHD special interest in public transit and urban development collides with my ADHD special interest in paleontology and the history of paleontology, but here we are ❤
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