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The back of the box contains information about Stefano Piccini, about whom I know nothing, and some factoids about Stygimoloch written in English and a few other languages. I have heard that Geoworld has a slight tendency to plagiarise artwork from other sources, although I do not know where this particular illustration came from. The box opens up, book-style, to reveal a cellophane sheet showing the matrix, hammer and chisel, and instructions about how to assemble the model. (I deliberately blurred the children’s faces out of respect.) The box claims there are 14 pieces, but this is misleading – only 13 pieces make up the actual skeleton, along with a base and two random bits of plastic containing the product number and manufacturing date (2011-12-20).


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