Triceratops: Eat, Roam, Repeat to open at Manchester Museum

Manchester Museum invites families to come face-to-face with one of the most famous dinosaurs of all time


Visitors will come face-to-face with a magnificent, fossilised Triceratops skull, as part of a fun, family-friendly experience that will reveal how this three-horned giant lived, what it ate and how it survived battles with predators like the mighty T. rex.

The exhibition starts with an atmospheric glimpse into the Cretaceous world that Triceratops once inhabited, evoking the sights, sounds and creatures of the time. Following this, visitors are invited to dive into the story of Triceratops in more detail, using its anatomy to reveal how it would have lived. Horns hint at the need for defence in an unforgiving environment, an awesome frill was ideal for display, while a beak built for shearing vegetation was paired with teeth adapted for endless grazing. Comparisons with animals like bighorn sheep, deer, peacocks and parrots help visitors understand how traits and behaviours can echo across millions of years. And at the heart of it all is the 1.9–metre long skull, presented as a striking connection to a lost ecosystem.

“So many of us have a love of dinosaurs as kids and it’s not hard to see why – the likes of Triceratops were truly awesome animals, adapted to life in a world that feels so unfamiliar. But many people grow out of this curiosity as they get older, so we’re hoping this exhibition not only inspires the junior palaeontologists but also reiginites that old flame among adults too,” said Glenn Roadley, Curator of Zoology at Manchester Museum. “Triceratops: Eat, Roam, Repeat is built around a rare Triceratops skull fossil, which is in Manchester for a limited time only, and we hope this incredible specimen will provide a portal into a fascinating lost world while also helping us to better understand the animals we share our planet with today.”

Free to enter, Triceratops: Eat, Roam, Repeat opens 25 October 2025 and runs until 22 February 2026.