Famous hippo comes to life for festival
Six-year-old Lars Rohle inspects the Armley Hippo bones at Armley Primary School, Leeds.
The legendary hippo, whose bones are believed to be about 130,000 years old, is being brought back to life by this year's I Love West Leeds Festival.
Organisers of the festival, which runs from July 3 to 25, decided to turn their hand to hippos in celebration of 'hippopotamus amphibious', the animal whose bones were discovered over 150 years ago at the site where the Armley Gyratory road system is today in the heart of Leeds.
In 1851, workmen digging clay in Longley's brick field in Wortley, Leeds, discovered several huge bones, which were identified as the bones of the Great Northern Hippopotamus.
The bones of the Armley Hippo are now kept at the Leeds Museum Discovery Centre but the hippo will not go uncelebrated.
Children at Armley Primary School in Leeds were shown some of the original Armley Hippo bones yesterday.
Festival organiser Jane Earnshaw and her team of volunteers have been making hundreds of plaster hippos and inviting local people to have a go at decorating them.
Picture: Simon Hulme.
- Three-inch blanket of snow heading our way today
- Alan Shearer in list of favourites for Leeds and England jobs: Latest odds
- Barnsley’s Keith Hill invokes Fawlty Towers over link with Leeds job
- McCormack feels United search can be narrowed down
- Redfearn throws down gauntlet as queue builds at Elland Road
Looking for...
Featured advertisers
Jobs
Search for a job
Motors
Search for a car
Property
Search for a house
Weather for Yorkshire
Saturday 11 February 2012
Today
Sunny spells
Temperature: -2 C to 1 C
Wind Speed: 7 mph
Wind direction: South
Tomorrow
Cloudy
Temperature: 2 C to 5 C
Wind Speed: 8 mph
Wind direction: North west
