Gigantophis is an extinct genus represented by its sole member Gigantophis garstini, a giant snake.[3] Before the Paleocene constrictor genus Titanoboa was described from Colombia in 2009, Gigantophis garstini was regarded as the largest snake ever recorded. It lived about 40 million years ago during the Eocene epoch of the Paleogene Period, in the Paratethys Sea, within the northern Sahara, where Egypt[4] and Algeria are now located.
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Gigantophis is an extinct genus represented by its sole member Gigantophis garstini, a giant snake. Before the Paleocene constrictor genus Titanoboa was...
discovery of Titanoboa cerrejonensis supplanted the previous record holder, Gigantophis garstini, which is known from the Eocene of Egypt. Titanoboa evolved...
the clade formed by Madtsoia pisdurensis (Late Cretaceous India) and Gigantophis garstini (Late Eocene North Africa). It is a member of a lineage of medium–large...
the jungle. Together, they fight a Tyrannosaurus, Pterodactylus and a Gigantophis. The film then follows Kong's rampage of New York City. Kong takes Ann...
that includes most large bodied and gigantic members of the group like Gigantophis, Wonambi, and Madtsoia. A clade with similar genus composition, although...
organisms Titanoboa, world's largest known snake from the fossil record Gigantophis, one of the world's largest snakes (past record holder for the world's...
in the largest snakes known up to the present, including Madtsoia and Gigantophis Chubutophis at Fossilworks.org Albino, Adriana Maria. "Snakes from the...
even up 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...
soon encounter and battle giant insects, an enormous snake known as Gigantophis, and prehistoric mammals like a Cave Bear, a Mastodon, and a Glyptodont...
; Mannion, 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...