Near crumbling cliffs outside Hastings in southern England, a herd of giant, plant-eating iguanodons gathered 130 million years ago and left their fossilised footprints embedded in the soil, Cambridge scientists revealed last week. Nearby, researchers also found the ancient tracks of a huge spike-covered dinosaur called an ankylosaurus. East Sussex was a busy place in Jurassic times, it seems.

In addition, Portsmouth University scientists last week outlined their discovery of a new species of flying reptile which once swooped above Britain. This giant raptor, Klobiodon rochei, had large fangs that would have meshed together to form a toothy cage, from which prey would have no escape once caught.

Nor have these newly discovered fossil wonders been confined to Britain. Scientists in South Africa recently announced they had found a new species of plant-eating dinosaur – Ledumahadi mafube – that was twice the size of an elephant while details of feathered dinosaurs, the predecessors of birds today, have been pouring out of China. Never has the probing of our prehistoric past been so productive.

It is a point stressed by Prof Paul Barrett of the Natural History Museum in London. “It would be wrong to say we are about to enter a new golden age of palaeontology. In fact, we have been in the middle of one for several years.”

This idea is backed by the fact there are now more palaeontologists working the field than ever before; more countries are being exploited for their dinosaur remains; more new species are being dug up and named; and more interesting work – using new technologies – is being done on fossilised bones once they have been disinterred.

In the process, scientists are learning how animals and plants responded to the very different and frequently much warmer climates that prevailed in those days. In turn, this information could have key importance in understanding how our world might respond to global heating later this century, researchers say.

Nor is there any dispute about one of the most important factors that triggered this rebirth of dinosaur studies. It was the film Jurassic Park, which was released 25 years ago. “Jurassic Park played a huge and under-appreciated role in the transformation of palaeontology that we are now witnessing,” said Dr Steve Brusatte, of Edinburgh University. “It used to be a rather dry academic topic carried out by old men at Oxbridge or Harvard. Today it is practised by a diverse group of scientists in many parts of the world, and it was Jurassic Park that provided the momentum for that change.”

Dr Susannah Maidment, a Natural History Museum palaeontologist agrees. “I was a teenager when Jurassic Park came out, and although I was already interested in dinosaurs by that time, its massive popularity meant I was no longer embarrassed about talking about such a career. I didn’t feel like a nerd.”

A ‘dinosaur’ promotes the 2015 film Jurassic World, at the Kings Cross station concourse, London. Fiction has fired the imagination, leading to a new wave of research.

Photograph: RZUK Images/Alamy Stock Photo

At Bristol University, Prof Mike Benton runs a masters course in palaeontology. “We have about 30 students a year, and we ask them what factor was the main influence in their decision to study dinosaurs. Jurassic Park gets the biggest show of hands.”

Other factors have played a role in the rebirth of dinosaur studies, however. “National pride is certainly involved,” said Barrett. “Dinosaur fossils are now being found all over the world. China and South Africa have provided key sites in recent years, for example, and that has had important consequences.”

Palaeontology is a cheap science that does not require huge telescopes or particle accelerators to proceed and can be used to kickstart scientific studies in a relatively poor nation. “You don’t have to put a lot of money into the subject but you can still boost national prestige and develop scientific expertise,” said Barrett.

Palaeontology has also benefited from technologies such as CAT scans, computer modelling, and high-powered microscopes which reveal tiny fragments of pigment and indicate how colourful some dinosaurs could be. Another example of this type of work was recently provided by Manchester University researchers who used computer simulations to show that the world’s most famous dinosaur, Tyrannosaurus rex, was not able to run at all and could only have lumbered towards its prey. Scavenging – not running after prey – was clearly a key part of its diet. “It is this ability to give dinosaurs colour and real lives that has also stimulated interest in them,” added Brusatte.

For good measure, there is the impact of dinosaur studies on the modern world. This has special relevance to research on the creatures and makes them important in resolving modern problems, said Maidment. One of the most important of these mysteries is known as the latitudinal biodiversity gradient.

“As you walk from the pole to the equator, you find the number of different species in a given area increases for each mile you travel towards the equator,” she said. “There are relatively few species at the poles and a lot at the equator. The trouble is that we don’t really know why species increase in that way because we have only one set of data – taken from the present day.

“If we can learn how things were in the past, when continents were in different positions or there was no ice at the poles, then we can gain an understanding of the phenomenon, and that will be crucial as global warming takes an effect on wildlife. How will diseases and their vectors behave and how will the growing of food be disrupted? Dinosaurs can teach us a lot.”

In the end, though, it is the simple sense of wonder that dinosaurs generate that has made them such a popular topic of investigation, said Benton. “Many of these creatures simply beggar belief. You have to ask: how the hell did that thing fly? How could something that vast even walk? You have to look at the physics of these creatures and realise they were doing something pretty wonderful.”

• This article was amended on 26 December 2018 to correct the titles of Dr Susannah Maidment and Dr Steve Brusatte.