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Is it free to enter? YES for kids!

Nominal charge for:
OAPs
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£6.00

KIDS ALWAYS FREE!

Routine Adult Peak Season Charge: £8.50

Are you open on a Saturday? YES!

Do you allow dogs? YES!
(All outdoor spaces and outdoor café area)

Something for all the family!

(Please refer to our terms and conditions for more information)

BIC
Project

Wildlife & Extinction Educational Monument

Inspired by one of the largest creatures to ever roam Shropshire, the life-size “Shropshire Woolly Mammoth” sculpture has been specifically designed to raise better awareness of the importance and critical need for change in order to protect our environment. Forming a crucial part of our Educational Extinction Trail, the sculpture also highlights how intensely the earth’s flora and fauna suffer as a result of humanity’s neglect.

With climate change and negative environmental issues constantly pervading our screens and newspapers, taking action to help protect our planet and its beautiful creatures is becoming ever more important. Imagining a world without many of the animals that we still have the privilege of seeing in the flesh today is truly heart-breaking, which is why we have chosen to create this sculpture. We hope that our visitors, young and old, will view the sculpture and question their own impact on the environment. Whether it be through encouraging permanent action, creating more awareness, or better educating spectators, we hope everyone who views the sculpture will rethink how our everyday lives effect the animals around us.

The “Shropshire Woolly Mammoth” Sculpture

The “Shropshire Woolly Mammoth” Sculpture Concept Art

Gracing the earth throughout the Pleistocene period (also known as the Ice Age) tens of thousands of years ago, the woolly mammoth is believed to have gone extinct as a result of human hunting, habitat interference and climate change. Woolly mammoths resided in almost every part of the earth, including our County of Shropshire! As the story goes, in 1986 woolly mammoth remains were found at Condover near Shrewsbury by a Bayston Hill resident who was walking her dog at the time. A full-size replica of the bones can now be found at the Shropshire Hills Discovery Centre.

This sculpture will form a crucial part of our school trips, allowing children and young people from all across the region and country to better understand how our actions can negatively affect our surrounding wildlife. We hope to utilise the sculpture to encourage everyone to stand up against climate change in order to benefit the future of all our remaining wildlife.

Woolly Mammoth Sculpture