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The Strange Change Machine was a Mattel toy introduced in 1968, in which "shape memory" plastic figures of prehistoric animals and science fiction-like creatures could be reconstituted from compressed "time capsule" form, and re-compressed back into that form. The label on the box read, "A Strange Change Toy featuring The Lost World ...
The Carnegie Collection was a series of authentic replicas based on dinosaurs and other extinct prehistoric creatures, using fossils featured at the Carnegie Museum of Natural History as references. They were produced by Florida -based company Safari Ltd ., known for their hand-painted replicas, from 1988 to 2015, and became known as "the world ...
Spike the Ultra Dinosaur, an interactive remote-control toy, was released in 2008. Spike was a green "ultra dinosaur" with a long, sauropod-like neck, as well as stegosaur-like thagomizers on his tail. The toy came with a plastic remote shaped like a rock that could be used to control Spike, as well as plastic balls and a bone. Spike the Ultra ...
Intended for use by small children, the Changeables line of toys was surprisingly sturdy as each figure was made from fairly thick plastic and typically contained only three moving parts. This made changing the individual figures from food item to robot/dinosaur and back fairly easy even for those within the intended age range.
Ages: 3+. After polling our on-staff parents, the choice is clear — the Toniebox is the hottest toy of 2024. It's a colorful audio player that plays stories once a character, or Tonie, is placed ...
Sinclair Dinoland plastic brontosaurus, 1964, in the collection of The Children's Museum of Indianapolis. At the Chicago World's Fair of 1933–1934, Sinclair sponsored a dinosaur exhibit meant to play on the link between the formation of petroleum deposits and the time of dinosaurs, now a largely discredited misconception.