Invicta dinosaurs were the first museum quality dinosaur toys.
Mục lục
The INVICTA DINOSAURS gave me quite a surprise.
The Invicta Dinosaurs gave me quite a surprise.
Enter your search terms Submit search form Web www.dinosaur-toys-collectors-guide.com
In the Summer of 1979 I was in New York (City) and decided to visit my beloved AMNH (American Museum of Natural History). It was both much as I remembered it and quite different.
I had hoped pick up a few SRG figures and my visit to the museum gift shop was both a disappointment (they were long gone) and a very pleasant surprise.
There before me was a set of the new British Museum of Natural History Dinosaurs made by Invicta. I took one look and was enthralled.
I hadn’t purchased a new Dinosaur toy in over a decade (I’d been busy) and here were figures that were highly detailed beyond my experience (which up until then had been limited to SRG and Marx) and (supposedly) all scaled to 1/45.
So I purchased a passel of the Invicta Dinosaurs. Megalosaurs, Tyrannosaurs, Triceratops, Diplodocus, Stegosaurus, Plesiosaurus and Pteranodon. Even some Blue Whales, Wooly Mammoths and a Scelidosaurus or two. I cleaned them out of Megalosaurus.
Invicta Dinosaurs not what you wanted? Go back check out other companies….
Beginning in 1974 Invicta Plastics of Leicestershire, England produced this line of twenty-three Dinosaur toys in conjunction with The British Museum of Natural History. First produced in hard, monochromatic rubber (the Blue Whale, Plesiosaurus and Icthyosaurus and Liopleurodon in hard monochrome plastic) the Invicta Dinosaurs series remained in production for twenty years, new releases coming out on a regular basis.
In 1988 Safari Ltd. began producing the colorful Carnegie Museum Collection in direct competition with the Invicta line. For some reason the distribution of the Invicta Dinosaurs was quite limited (perhaps an elitist desire to be available only in museum shoppes).
In response Invicta Dinosaurs suddenly appeared in new, colorful, painted versions. The hard plastic figures (Icthyosaurus, Plesiosaurus and Pliosaur) now in rubber. They continued this for a while but the figures became harder and harder to find.
Today they can still be found on eBay and other web venues as well as your garage sales, flea markets and the like.
Invicta has (recently?) stopped producing these Dinosaurs and I have no idea what has happened to the molds. They are out of production and headed for collectible status. In 2004 The British Museum took up with Toyway and their line of Walking With Dinosaurs figures. Ah, the fickleness of corporate romances….
List of All Dinosaurs Made by Invicta for The British Museum of Natural History
A total of twenty-three (23) in total, with their approximate dates of release:
To learn more about each figure click on the highlighted Dinosaur name.
Apatosaurus – Brontosaurus (1987)
Baryonyx (1989)
Blue Whale !! (1974?)
Brachiosaurus (1984)
Cetiosaurus (1985)
Dimetrodon (1993)
Diplodocus (1974)
Glyptodon (1975)
Icthyosaurus (1986)
Iguanodon (1980)
Lambeosaurus (1993)
Liopleurodon A Pliosaur (1989)
Mamenchisaurus (1980)
Megalosaurus (1974)
Muttaburrasaurus (1989)
Plesiosaurus (1978)
Pteranodon (1978)
Scelidosaurus ((1974?)
Stenonychosaurus – Troodon (1988)
Stegosaurus (1975)
Triceratops (1975)
Tyrannosaurus Rex (1977)
Woolly Mammoth (1975)
I would like to thank
Max Magnus Norman
for allowing the use of photos of three of the figures that I no longer or never possessed, the Dimetrodon, Lambeosaurus and Mamenchisaurus. Thanx Max!
These were sold both individually and in boxed sets.
Box Set 1 (1974) consisted of the Blue Whale, Diplodocus, Megalosaurus and Scelidosaurus.
Box Set 2 (1975) was: The Glyptodon, Stegosaurus, Triceratops and Woolly Mammoth.
The Invicta Dinosaur series is now Out of Production. I’m about out of bandwidth.
There are many other great toy companies that you might want to check out.
We here at The Dinosaur Toys Collectors Guide have only one purpose in being here at all. Providing you, our readers, with the best, most informative and entertaining information about Dinosaur toys both past and present.
In order to best achieve that goal, in addition to providing pages on individual figures, advice and suggestions on obtaining the Dinosaur toys and pricing, availability and age and personality appropriateness information…. We have instituted our:
1) The (easily subscribed to, FREE) Daily “Dino-Blog” where you are regularly updated as each new page is created and kept up-to-date on Dinosaur toys news and the happenings in “Dino-town.”
2) Our Contact-osaur-Us form which you can use to send us comments and tell us what you need and want to see. After all, this site is for your information.
3) Social Networking links (way bottom, upper left) so you can share this page, and our site, with your friends. Thank you.
4) Our mighty and inimitable Search-osaurus Center. (Click link or Below.) You can use the search bars to either search the site for all things Dinosaur (toys) or search the entire web for all things anything at All-a-saurus.
5) As you have been perusing this site you may be wondering, “Can I do that?” Well, if having your own website has been your dream you can make that dream come true, here.
6) Our always open Donate-O-saurus Center (opens new window) where you can make a donation and keep us in business, such as it is. We thank you for anything you can give.
Search-O-Saurus Center
You can use this site-search box to find everything you need about Dinosaur toys collecting. Can’t remember everywhere we mentioned, say, Velociraptors or Diplodocuses? Just put in your search term and you’ll get a listing of everyplace on our site where you can find what you are particularly interested in.
Custom Search
Please note that your search results page will have ads ABOVE and BELOW the actual search results. Those are not from the site, but should be of interest, since Google targets the ads to your particular search.
This Form cannot be submitted until the missing
fields (labelled below in red) have been filled in
Where YOU provide feedback to us.
Please note that all fields followed by an asterisk must be filled in.
First Name*
Last Name
E-Mail Address*
Street Address
City
State/Prov
Zip/Postal Code
Country*
Comments? What would YOU like to see here?
Please enter the word that you see below.