Field Station: Dinosaurs, the prehistoric theme park that brought towering T. rex and lumbering longnecks to life near exit 15X of the New Jersey Turnpike, is no longer on the brink of extinction.

The dinosaur park had to pack up and move out of Secaucus last fall. Now, a representative for the park confirms that Field Station has just signed a deal with Bergen County. Officials are set to announce the details of the dinosaurs' move to Overpeck County Park on Monday.

A Facebook account for Field Station shared a photo tease of the new location on Thursday, asking followers to guess the spot -- a wild, reedy section of Fort Lee Road in Teaneck. Overpeck, which spans more than 800 acres, including five miles of trails, was built on the former site of landfills and brownfields and covers Teaneck, Leonia, Ridgefield Park and Palisades Park.

A visit to the section of Overpeck Park shown in the photo shared by Field Station yields a long, paved path surrounded on both sides by brush that is somewhat littered with empty bottles. The vacant area near Teaneck Creek sits at the dead end of Fort Lee Road. The dinosaur park's former home was a hilly area with gravel paths and a sunny perch where visitors could take photos with T. rex and the New York skyline.

Field Station, which had a three-year lease with Hudson County, opened in 2012 at Secaucus' Laurel Hill Park. The park ran for three seasons -- usually open to the general public starting in May and closing in the fall -- until Hudson County officials informed park staff that construction would be starting on a new building for High Tech High School at the same location, despite the park having renewed its lease for two more years. So the roaring robotic dinosaurs, created from steel and foam, were packed up and stayed dormant in storage until the park could find a new spot.

It doesn't look like much right now but this is the future site of Field Station: Dinosaurs. Anyone want to take a guess... Posted by Field Station: Dinosaurs on Thursday, March 31, 2016

As the park got ready to close in 2015, word came that Field Station was scouting for locations outside New Jersey. One potential new home for the park was Derby, Kansas, but the dinosaur park, whose original tagline was "9 minutes from Manhattan, 90 million years back in time," ended up staying in North Jersey.

At the time, Guy Gsell, president of the park, said he preferred that the park stay in the region, though he anticipated it would be difficult to find the necessary 8- to 10-acre space the arrangement of dinosaurs would require.

Before the park moved out of Secaucus in 2015, the price of admission was lowered to $15 for all ages from a usual $17.50 to $20 admission, in part due to attendance dropping, Gsell said. On good days, the park drew upwards of 3,000 visitors, he said.

A part of Overpeck Park at Fort Lee Road in Teaneck. (Amy Kuperinsky | NJ Advance Media for NJ.com)

Amy Kuperinsky may be reached at akuperinsky@njadvancemedia.com. Follow her on Twitter @AmyKup. Find NJ.com Entertainment on Facebook.