Forget boiled eggs, this Easter is all about dinosaur eggs with Easter bundles from the Natural History Museum Shop.

For £7 each, choose between a terrifying T. Rex or a tasty Triceratops bundle and receive a chocolate lolly and colourful dinosaur egg. Submerge your egg in water and watch a dinosaur hatch and grow in just a few days!

The chocolate lollies are free from palm oil and made with sustainably grown cocoa. Proceeds from all orders made on our online shop help support the Natural History Museum. With your help we can continue to carry out pioneering research, care for our internationally important collections and inspire people to take better care of the natural world.

For more information and to purchase, visit: www.nhmshop.co.uk.

For high res images and cut out images, please contact v.ramsay@nhm.ac.uk

Dinosaurs grow up to 16cm. Ages 3+. Lolly contains milk and soya, may contain traces of nuts and gluten.
 
Notes to Editors:

 
Media contact: Tel: +44 (0)20 7942 5654/ +44 (0)7799 690151/ Email: press@nhm.ac.uk
 
About the Natural History Museum

 
The Natural History Museum is both a world-leading science research centre and the most visited natural history museum in Europe. With a vision of a future in which both people and the planet thrive, it is uniquely positioned to be a powerful champion for balancing humanity’s needs with those of the natural world.
 
It is custodian of one of the world’s most important scientific collections comprising over 80 million specimens. The scale of this collection enables researchers from all over the world to document how species have and continue to respond to environmental changes - which is vital in helping predict what might happen in the future and informing future policies and plans to help the planet.
 
The Museum’s 300 scientists continue to represent one of the largest groups in the world studying and enabling research into every aspect of the natural world. Their science is contributing critical data to help the global fight to save the future of the planet from the major threats of climate change and biodiversity loss through to finding solutions such as the sustainable extraction of natural resources.
 
The Museum uses its enormous global reach and influence to meet its mission to create advocates for the planet - to inform, inspire and empower everyone to make a difference for nature. We welcome over five million visitors each year, our digital output reaches hundreds of thousands of people in over 200 countries each month and our touring exhibitions have been seen by around 30 million people in the last 10 years.