My Garage Kit Gallery
My Garage Kit Gallery
ESTABLISHED SEPTEMBER 2005.

Welcome - I hope you enjoy viewing my work. I modify most of my figure kits so that they wind up quite different from the original. (And there is a lot more here than just dinosaurs - so browse on!) I re-discovered the joy of art in mid-life and its been a joy to create and share my vision with others. Art, like all creative gifts, exists to be shared so as to enrich the lives of others.

So this website is my gift to you. If you have an interest in art/sculpting/modeling of all kinds of subjects, I would recommend that you check out the Internet Figure Modeling Clubhouse at

INTERNET CLUBHOUSE and also see

MODEL WARSHIPS.COM

At both sites you will find incredible artists and sculptors, some nationally known. Their work will leave you in awe.

Thank you for stopping by!

NAVIGATION INSTRUCTIONS: THE GALLERY PAGE LINKS ARE THE SMALL NUMBERS ON THE LEFT, JUST ABOVE THE INDEX PHOTOS. TO ENLARGE PHOTOS, CLICK ON THE THUMBNAIL, THEN CLICK ON THE ENLARGED PHOTO IN THE LOWER RIGHT-HAND CORNER OF THIS PAGE AND FOLLOW THE DIRECTIONS.

FYI: SOME THUMBNAILS MAY APPEAR DISTORTED - IF YOU CLICK ON THE "VIEW FULL SIZE IMAGE" TEXT ON LOWER R OF THE PHOTO IT WILL OPEN UP CORRECTLY.

Giganotosaurus 
 

My build-up of great Japanese paleosculptor Shinzen's 1:40 scale Giganotosaurus.

Giganotosaurus

Giganotosaurus carolinii

Pronounced: Jig-an-o-toe-Saw-rus Diet:Carnivore (Meat-Eater) Name Means: "Giant Southern Lizard" Length: 43 feet (14 m) Height: 17 feet (5.5 m) Weight: 7-10(?) tons (6,800-9500 kilos) Time: Late Cretaceous - 100 MYA

Giganotosaurus was one big meat-eater! It may have been the biggest one of all, even bigger than T. rex. It lived in South America at a time when there were still large sauropods for it to eat. It had a very strong body and a mouth full of teeth like steak knives. Just its head alone was 6 feet (2 m) long!

A recent discovery in Argentina suggests that Giganotosaurus may have been as large as 46 feet (15 m). What is interesting is that there is another dinosaur found in North Africa, called Carcharodontosaurus that is almost identical - in fact, it may be the same genus. Since South America and Africa were still connected back then, it is possible they are very close relations.

Like T. rex, this dinosaur hunted in warm and swampy areas. Some of the sauropods of that time had armor on their backs in order to protect them from an attack from above and that kind of attack could only have come from a predator as large as Giganotosaurus. Two mass Giganotosaur burial sites in Patagonia, Argentina, found by Dr. Rodolfo Coria, an Argentine palaeontologist, suggest that these Theropods may have lived together in family groups, with individuals of various ages and sizes. Cooperative hunting would have been a distinct benefit considering that its main prey may well have been the Titanosaurid Argentinosaurus, which, estimates suggest, could grow to be 100 tons in weight(!)