This impressive resculpt of the Diplodocus is the longest figure in the Carnegie line.
This resculpt of the original Diplodocus figure improves upon the design by incorporating the latest scientific theories, which hold that the animal carried its neck stretched in front of its body. This would have allowed the sauropod to graze on low vegetation rather than high treetops, as once thought. This also gives the new Diplodocus an impressive total length of nearly two feet, making it the longest animal in the Carnegie Collection. The golden-hued body has also been enhanced with a forest green dorsal coloration and azure markings around the tail and head.
This resculpt of the original Diplodocus figure improves upon the design by incorporating the latest scientific theories, which hold that the animal carried its neck stretched in front of its body. This would have allowed the sauropod to graze on low vegetation rather than high treetops, as once thought. This also gives the new Diplodocus an impressive total length of nearly two feet, making it the longest animal in the Carnegie Collection. The golden-hued body has also been enhanced with a forest green dorsal coloration and azure markings around the tail and head.