Anyone who has ever wanted to step into the "Jurassic Park" films (without fearing for their lives) will luckily get their chance, as "Walking with Dinosaurs" is making a North American comeback.

According to the Associated Press, "Walking with Dinosaurs, the Arena Spectacular" will make the rounds in the U.S. and Canada for the first time since 2007, the year of its inaugural tour. The lifelike dinosaurs will this time be covered in feathers to make give the creatures an updated look.

CLICK HERE to see photos from past Walking with Dinosaurs events.

"We've decided to bring them up to date," Creature Technology Company's Philip Millar told the AP. "I've been going on about feathers for some years now. And now we've finally taken the leap and we're applying the feathers to the dinosaurs we're fairly confident had feathers."

The new designs, the self-proclaimed "dino geek" said, will be based on recent studies that have found non-avian dinosaurs to often have feathers.

The previous tour reached eight million people in 217 cities. This one will make stops in major U.S. arenas like Cleveland's Quicken Loans Arena Brooklyn's Barclay's Center in New York City and New Jersey's Prudential Center. It will also visit cities like Los Angeles, Kansas City, Montreal, Oklahoma City, Phoenix, Salt Lake City and Milwaukee.

DinosaurLive.com announced that the show will include 20 life-size dinosaurs from 10 different species including the Tyrannosaurus Rex. Ancient time periods will stretch 200 million years, from the Triassic to the Jurassic and Cretaceous.

New Yorkers have already gotten a preview, as a feathered baby T-Rex made an appearance Thursday in New York City's Times Square.

CLICK HERE to see a photo gallery of the Times Square baby T-Rex courtesy of BroadwayWorld.com.

Millar also told the AP he is glad to see the show make a North American return when the debate over climate change is fresh on many people's minds.

"Dinosaurs are deeply charismatic. They are very deeply appealing to children. And so I think it's important that the curriculum around that is fact-based and the way evolution works and the way the history of the planet works" he said. "I mean, climate change killed the dinosaurs. It wasn't just a meteor. The meteor precipitated making climate change which led to the extinction. So there's some fairly important lessons from these creatures."