Field Station: Dinosaurs in Leonia, NJ
Overview of Field Station: Dinosaurs - great day trip from the NYC area! This video was taken at its previous location in Secaucus - it's now located in Leonia, NJ.
Field Station Dinosaurs, Secaucus, NJ
A trip to the dinosaur park in Secaucus, New Jersey. July 2012.
Field Stations Dinosaurs in Fort Lee, New Jersey (USA)
Field Stations Dinosaurs in Fort Lee, New Jersey (USA)
My boys' review of Field Station Dinosaurs in Secaucus New Jersey
My boys' review of Field Station Dinosaurs in Secaucus, New Jersey.
Dinosaur Theme Park Dino's Come to life at Field Station
New interactive Dinosaur theme park opens in Derby Kansas May 24 2018, 40 active dinosaurs right at your fingertips. This interactive Dinosaur part is Called 'Field Station Dinosaurs. Most don't know the rich history of dinos in the United States. More bones discovered in the planes of America than any other country.
Field Stations Dinosaurs in Fort Lee, New Jersey
Field Stations Dinosaurs in Fort Lee, New Jersey (USA)
Field Station: Dinosaurs
Bergen County Executive Jim Tedesco speaks to Fox 5’s Good Day New York about the opening weekend of Field Station: Dinosaurs at Overpeck County Park.
Learn more about the exhibit and details about visiting here:
Dinosaur Park in Secaucus may soon be extinct
The plan to move the High Tech School from North Bergen to Secaucus is in the works. Although nothing is final yet, the purposed school will be on the same property where Field Station Park is currently located. This plan has been a thought for around 10 years however, it has recently been updated. Freeholder O’Dea said in a statement to the Hudson Reporter, “The reason it has taken so long for the plan to be put into action is that the county has spent the better part of the past 10 years waiting for the state Department of Education to approve the project and provide funding.” Nevertheless, this month the school has received that approval.
Field Station Dinosaurs! Derby Kansas
Boy was it HOT????
Field Station: Dinosaurs Walkthrough 2018
Field Station: Dinosaurs is an outdoor prehistoric theme park with two locations in the United States. The park is designed for families with children between the ages of three and eleven.
For more information visit:
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New overpeck park
via YouTube Capture
We found dinosaurs in New Jersey
Lifesize mechanical dinosaurs at Field Station Dinosaurs in NJ, 40 Fort Lee Rd, Leonia, New Jersey 07605
Filmed on: Iphone 5s
Meet massive dinosaurs at this New Jersey park
Field Station: Dinosaurs in Leonia brings prehistoric marvels roaring back to life. Explore Field Stations trails and interact with over 30 life-sized animatronic dinosaurs.
06/24/18 Field Station Dinosaurs Derby
Overpeck County Park in Leonia, New Jersey
‘Overpeck County Park is an 811-acre county park in Bergen County, New Jersey, with major sections in Leonia, Palisades Park, Ridgefield Park, and Teaneck, surrounding Overpeck Creek, a tributary of the Hackensack River.’ This is not far from where I live so I go here a lot to run and de-stress.
Title: Overpeck County Park in Leonia, New Jersey
Hashtags: #Honey1980 #OverpeckCountyPark #NewJersey
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James Van Orden of Leonia NJ remembers his wife Dolores Taylor
I met James Van Orden June 2014 outside the Leonia Post Office. He was talking with Kathleen about his late wife, Dolores, and I joined the conversation. The story of how he met and married Dolores was so interesting that I turned on the video of my camera. Here is the result. James Van Orden died in January, 2015, less than a year after his beloved wife, Dolores. R.I.P.
NJ's dinosaur park faces final season
Approximately 65 million years ago, the Tyrannosaurus rex roamed the lush river valleys of North America, snapping perhaps the most powerful jaw on land to gobble up 500 pounds of dino flesh in a single bite.
Then a man who never witnessed the Cretaceous Period brought the T. rex to New Jersey.
It goes all the way back to the New York World Fair in 1965, said 55-year-old Guy Gsell. When I was a little kid, I saw those great, famous Sinclair dinosaurs.
From that childhood moment through an adult career in theater and museums, Guy fostered a dream of restoring those giant extinct creatures to life for the amusement of children. He realized that dream three years ago when Field Station: Dinosaurs opened for its first season in Secaucus.
Kids are screaming. They're laughing, Guy said. And, surprisingly enough, they're singing as well because we have a dinosaur troubadour who sings dinosaur songs all day long.
While Guy and Jumping Jimmy (the dinosaur troubadour) write dino-ballads, a paleontologist from the New Jersey State Museum ensures the Triceratops receives the correct paint job, the Hadrosaurs move as they should, and the more than 100,000 visitors the park sees every season step into a scientifically accurate prehistoric world bordering the New Jersey Turnpike.
Guy leases the park's 16 acres from the county, which plans to build a technical high school on the site at the end of the summer, leaving Field Station's life-sized juvenile T. rex puppet and 30-something animatronic dinosaurs in danger of extinction.
It's going to be very hard to match a piece of property like this, Guy said.
Guy's received dozens of offers and suggestions for where he might transport his herd, but he wants to keep his beasts outdoors and so continues to search for an ideal habitat.
For now, the Field Station team prepares for Saturday, the start of their final season in Secaucus, by painting, rehearsing and for one of the park's employees (the one inside that T. rex puppet) lumbering about the station's pathways in search of his next meal.
Haddy, New Jersey's State Dinosaur
One of the most important dinosaur discoveries in the world took place in New Jersey. Now the official state dinosaur, Hadrosaurus foulkii, nicknamed Haddy, was discovered in Haddonfield, NJ in 1858. A cast of the skeleton was on display at the New Jersey State Museum throughout 2014. Paleoartist Jason Poole was drew a full size representation, also on display. For more information, visit StateoftheArtsNJ.com.
Dinosaurs went extinct in New Jersey?
The first ever recorded dinosaur skeleton to be mounted and exhibited was in New Jersey in 1858.