Mamenchisaurus (Dinosaurs of China by Safari Ltd.)

4 (14 votes)

Review and Photographs by Quentin Brendel (aka Pachyrhinosaurus).

Having appeared in the film The Lost World: Jurassic Park, Mamenchisaurus is commonly known as the dinosaur with the longest neck. While this may not have been true due to fossils which have yet to be discovered or named, the Mamenchisaurus by Safari LTD has an enormously long neck compared to its body.

image

This figure’s size is the first thing many would notice about it. This dinosaur is around 60 cm (two feet) straight from snout to tail. Due to curvature, the actual length is just slightly longer. Of that, 27 cm, almost half of the model, consists of the animal’s head and neck. To the top of the hips is around 10 cm.

image

It is posed with its neck and tail outstretched and leaning to the left. The paint is mostly dark green with a cream underside which has soft edges. The feet also have this cream color. On the back there are round, black markings. The right side has lots of small black spots on it which for some reason are missing on the left. There is a spray of reddish-brown on each side which complements the green well. The head is painted black with cream around its mouth, eyes, and nostrils. The eyes are green with black pupils and a white spot to simulate a reflection.

image

It is difficult to decide on which scale this figure is supposed to be since there is no indication of the species on the model itself (though the packaged variant may have it listed). The skull has the basic shape of a Mamenchisaurus skull, though it isn’t quite exact. Most prominently, the tip of the lower mandible is missing the point that it seems to have had. The neck is very thin and snake-like. It should have more muscles on it for support and be pointing more upwards. The tail should be pointing upwards at the base only to run parallel to the ground after the first few vertebrae. Sauropod feet are very often incorrect on older models and this is no exception. The hands have five claws painted on five distinct digits. There should in fact be only one claw on the inside of the column-like limb without distinct digits. The rear legs are almost the same as the front. Many mammals have similar front and back feet but dinosaurs did not. They are a bit more accurate, though should not have as many claws on them as they do, as there should only be three. The feet are also proportionally to large, it appears. This dinosaur appears to be missing a pubis bone and the ischium looks very tube-like. The skin of this dinosaur is textured with wrinkly striations whereas there should be small non-overlapping scales but they would not be visible at this size.

image

The Safari LTD Mamenchisaurus was part of a set of three dinosaurs in the “Dinosaurs of China” line. Introduced in 1993, each figure was sculpted by the late Ely Kish and was sold in a windowed box with a skeleton backdrop. After the set was retired, the Mamenchisaurus was moved to Safari’s also retired “Dino Discoveries” line. It was sold without a box and fossil backdrop, which was when I acquired mine. This makes it very hard to find the background compared to the other two dinosaurs which were only sold in that way.

image

Despite its inaccuracies, the Dinosaurs of China Mamenchisaurus is a classic figure. It is one of the longest sauropods made by many of the popular companies and is one of the few toys made of this genus.


Support the Dinosaur Toy Blog by making dino-purchases through these links to Ebay and Amazon. Disclaimer: links to Ebay.com and Amazon.com on the The Dinosaur Toy Blog are often affiliate links, when you make purchases through these links we may make a commission

Share this:

Comments 6

  • I’m so glad to find this post. My dad bought this exact one for me on a business trip to Paris back in the early 2000s. It was my favourite toy growing up.

  • I too am glad to see a review. Despite the model’s inaccuracies, I’d love to find one sometime with the fossil backdrop.

  • I said, has not yet made a Mamenchisaurus with scientific accuracy. Invicta was much better Mamenchisaurus with inaccuracies that of Safari.

    Good analysis of Quentin Brendel. My congratulations.

  • Glad to finally see a review of this figure. One of my favorite sauropods and despite its flaws I really like this model, still need to get it.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

  • Search

  • Brand

  • Dinosaur Name

  • Classification

  • Age

  • Product Type

  • News Categories

  • Video Playlists

error: Content is protected !!