Photo: Museumservices / CC BY-SA 4.0
Perched on a dusty mesa near Winton in outback Queensland, the Australian Age of Dinosaurs is a world-class fossil museum and laboratory that brings the continent’s prehistoric giants to life. This isn’t your typical static exhibition – it’s an active research centre where you can watch palaeontologists painstakingly clean and prepare real dinosaur bones, many unearthed from the surrounding plains. The star attraction is the colossal Australotitan cooperensis, nicknamed “Cooper”, Australia’s largest known dinosaur, whose reconstructed skeleton dominates the main hall. The museum’s remote setting, with vast horizons and red earth, adds to the sense of stepping back in time. For travellers self-driving the Red Centre Way or exploring Queensland’s dinosaur trail, this is an essential, immersive stop that reveals a side of Australia you never knew existed.
Highlights & What to See
- Dinosaur Fossil Laboratory: Peer through glass windows at technicians working on real Cretaceous fossils – you can even book a hands-on “Prep a Fossil” experience to try it yourself.
- March of the Titanosaurs: A dramatic gallery showcasing the complete skeleton of Australotitan alongside life-sized reconstructions and interactive displays about Australia’s ancient ecosystems.
- Dinosaur Stampede at Lark Quarry: A short drive away, this conservation park preserves the world’s only recorded dinosaur stampede – thousands of footprints frozen in stone, now housed under a protective shelter.
- Outback Sunset Views: The mesa-top location offers 360-degree panoramas over the Channel Country; time your visit for late afternoon to watch the landscape turn gold and crimson.
Suggested Time to Spend
Allocate a full half-day to do the museum justice – around three to four hours to explore the exhibits, watch the lab in action, and walk the short outdoor trails. If you also want to visit Lark Quarry Dinosaur Stampede (20 km away), plan a full day. Most travellers combine both in a single day, starting at the museum in the morning and heading to the stampede site after lunch. The museum is best visited between April and September, when outback temperatures are milder.
Nearby Areas Worth Combining
- Winton: The nearest town, with the Waltzing Matilda Centre, a quirky museum dedicated to Australia’s most famous folk song.
- Longreach: Home to the Qantas Founders Museum and the Australian Stockman’s Hall of Fame, about 2 hours’ drive east.
- Bladensburg National Park: A stunning outback park with red gorges, Aboriginal rock art, and camping under the stars, just south of Winton.
- Hughenden: Another dinosaur hotspot, with the Flinders Discovery Centre featuring a life-sized Muttaburrasaurus skeleton.
- Barcaldine: The birthplace of the Australian Labor Party, with the Tree of Knowledge memorial and historic streetscape.
Please check official sources for current details.
Note: opening hours, prices and booking requirements change often — please check official sources for current details.
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Image credits
- Winton — www.gondwananet.com / CC BY-SA 3.0
- Lark Quarry Dinosaur Stampede — me_whynot / Public domain
- Longreach — Chris Olszewski / CC BY-SA 4.0
- Bladensburg National Park — Carole Mackinney / FAL
- Hughenden — Ridiculopathy / CC0
- Barcaldine — kenhodge13 / CC BY 2.0