Lots of things to do on the Isle of Wight
This summer, if you want to entertain and educate the kids you don’t have to go too far.Children of all ages have a fascination with dinosaurs and fossils and one of the best places to go if you want to combine a family holiday with the thrills of pre-history is the Isle of Wight. A combination of location and geology has makes it the perfect place to hunt fossils! In fact, the Isle of Wight is one of the richest locations for dinosaur finds in the whole of Europe as well as being a convenient and appealing family holiday destination.
Getting there couldn’t be easier as the ferry to Isle of Wight operates between the mainland and the island every day of the year on three routes across the Solent.Routes operate from Portsmouth to Fishbourne, Lymington to Yarmouth or Portsmouth to Ryde with crossings taking from around 18 – 35 minutes. It’s a great way to start a family holiday, and more importantly it feels like you’re going on holiday because you have to take an IOW ferry – an adventure in itself for the kids.
The Isle of Wight is blessed with warmer than average climate today, but 120 million years ago the the IOW was a subtropical paradise teeming with land and marine life. Situated close to the equator, sandwiched between what iwas to become Cornwall and Belgium, the IOW was home to many prehistoric creatures.The commonest of all these prehistoric Island inhabitants was Iguanodon, which stood about five metres tall. As many as three hundred fossilised skeletons of these giants have been discovered on the Island to date.
The Isle of Wight has proved to be a major source of dinosaur finds and an 11 mile stretch of sandstone and clay in the Sandown area, known to geologists as the Wealdon outcrop, is Europe’s most prolific reservoir of dinosaur fossils.Over 15 types of dinosaur are known to have inhabited the Island and a new species is discovered on average every three years. One of the most recent Isle dinosaur discoveries was unearthed by local dino hunter Gavin Leng in 1997.Called Eotyrannus lengi, it’s an early relative of Tyrannosaurus Rex and was a carnivorous dinosaur about 15 ft (4.5 m) long that lived during the middle Cretaceous period about 120 to 125 million years ago. That pre-dates Tyrannosaurus Rex by nearly 80 million years.
One other form of dinosaur that will be viewable during the summer months on the Island will be the rock star variety IOW festival.