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Diagram showing the known skull remains of the holotype (left) and the assigned specimen. Though incompletely known, the skull of Giganotosaurus appears to have been low. The maxilla of the upper jaw had a 92 cm (36 in) long tooth row, was deep from top to bottom, and its upper and lower edges were almost parallel.
Giganotosaurus : ... "Mass estimates: North vs South redux" Scott Hartman's Skeletal Drawing.com. Retrieved April 29, 2019 ... This diagram was created with ...
English: Adaptation of Slate Weasel Size comparison of the two known specimens of Giganotosaurus. Silhouettes scaled and based on Franoys's Giganotosaurus skeletal. Human silhouette from File:Silhouette of man standing and facing forward.svg.
English: Size comparison of the two known specimens of Giganotosaurus. Silhouettes scaled and based on Scott Hartman's Giganotosaurus skeletal and size comparison. Human silhouette 180 cm from File:Silhouette of man standing and facing forward.svg.
Size of a few specimens compared to a human. Mapusaurus was a large theropod, but slightly smaller in size than its close relative Giganotosaurus, with the largest specimen measuring around 10.2–12.2 metres (33–40 ft) long and weighing up to 3–6 metric tons (3.3–6.6 short tons).
Regardless of speculation, I think this would be more useful as two separate images: the skeletal diagram and the fossil illustration. -SlvrHwk 02:48, 22 February 2022 (UTC) as suggested by User:SlvrHwk, I have created separate files for the skeletal diagram and the fossil illustration. P2N2222A 11:34, 22 February 2022 (UTC)
The holotype of Meraxes, MMCh-PV 65, was discovered in 2012.Known from a nearly complete skull, pectoral and pelvic elements, partial forelimbs, complete hindlimbs, fragmentary ribs and cervical and dorsal vertebrae, a sacrum, and several complete caudal vertebrae, it represents the most complete carcharodontosaurid skeleton known from the Southern Hemisphere. [1]
Skeletal cast mount, Tianjin Natural History Museum Skeletons of Shunosaurus (left) and Giganotosaurus (right) in the Natural History Museum of Helsinki, Finland The first fossil of Shunosaurus was discovered in 1977 by a group of students, practising paleontological excavation at a road bank.