- a
single species, G.
garstini.
Before the
Paleocene constrictor genus Titanoboa was
described from
Colombia in 2009, G.
garstini was
regarded as the largest...
-
formed by
Madtsoia pisdurensis (Late
Cretaceous India) and
Gigantophis garstini (Late
Eocene North Africa). It is a
member of a
lineage of medium–large...
-
Titanoboa cerrejonensis supplanted the
previous record holder,
Gigantophis garstini,
which is
known from the
Eocene of Egypt.
Titanoboa evolved following the...
-
madtsoiids were
basal alethinophidians.
Gigantophis Andrews, 1901
Gigantophis garstini Andrews, 1901 (Andrews, 1906; Hoffstetter, 1961b; Paleogene, Late Eocene;...
- to 12.3 m (40 ft).
Another known very
large fossil snake is
Gigantophis garstini,
estimated at 9.3–10.7 m (31–35 ft) in length,
although later study shows...
-
sailors did not just run back
across the log when Kong appeared.
Gigantophis garstini –
According to Goldner, "this huge
snake that
appeared in one
scene and...
-
cremated at
Golders Green Crematorium. The
extinct giant snake Gigantophis garstini was
named in his honour. "Garstin, Sir
William Edmund (1849–1925), civil...
-
partial vertebra" (DPC 25679)
Indeterminate snake material Gigantophis garstini Umm Rigl
Member Birket Qarun 1 "giant" mid-trunk
vertebra (DPC 25616),...
-
Philip D. (2017-07-04). "The
osteology of the
giant snake Gigantophis garstini from the
upper Eocene of
North Africa and its
bearing on the phylogenetic...
- Rio und
Philip D. Mannion: The
osteology of the
giant snake Gigantophis garstini from the
upper Eocene of
North Africa and its
bearing on the phylogenetic...