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Christian Voigt’s stunning dinosaur sekelton photos
German photographer Christian Voigt turns dinosaur skeletons into stunning artworks -- without ever touching a bone. This is a Tyrannosaurus Rex from the Dinosaurier-Park Altmühltal in Denkendorf, Germany.
Christian Voigt / Dinosaurier-Park Altmühltal
A Tyrannosaurus Rex from the Senckenberg Naturmuseum in Frankfurt. The longest known T-Rex skull is more than 4 feet long.
Christian Voigt / Senckenberg Naturmuseum / Frankfurt am Main
A Triceratops skull from the Senckenberg Naturmuseum in Frankfurt. The herbivore dinosaur is believed to have weighed between 12,000 and 16,000 pounds.
Christian Voigt / Senckenberg Naturmuseum / Frankfurt am Main
A Stygimoloch Spinifer skull from the Museum für Naturkunde in Berlin. The Stygimoloch, meaning "devil from hell" in Greek, was a dinosaur that lived at the end of the Cretaceous, 66 million years ago.
Christian Voigt / Museum für Naturkunde / Berlin
A Stegosaurus from the Senckenberg Naturmuseum in Frankfurt. The large bony plates and the spiky tail have made the Stegosaurus one of the most easily recognizable dinosaurs ever discovered.
Christian Voigt / Senckenberg Naturmuseum / Frankfurt am Main
A Pterosauria Dracula from the Dinosaurier-Park Altmühltal in Denkendorf, Germany. The name "Dracula" stems from the fact that fossils of this species where first discovered in Transylvania.
Christian Voigt / Dinosaurier-Park Altmühltal
A Mantellisaurus Atherfieldensis from the National History Museum in London. The Mantellisaurus was very similar to the more widely known Iguanodon.
Christian Voigt / National History Museum / London
A Mammut Americanum from the Senckenberg Naturmuseum in Frankfurt. Mammoths went extinct roughly 10,000 to 11,000 years ago.
Christian Voigt / Senckenberg Naturmuseum / Frankfurt am Main
A Kentrosaurus Aethiopicus from the Museum für Naturkunde in Berlin. Kentrosaurus was a close relative of the beloved Stegosaurus.
Christian Voigt / Museum für Naturkunde / Berlin
A Gomphotherium Angustidens from the Senckenberg Naturmuseum in Frankfurt. This distant relative of the elephant went extinct around 10 million years go.
Christian Voigt / Senckenberg Naturmuseum / Frankfurt am Main
An Euoplocephalus from the Senckenberg Naturmuseum in Frankfurt. These massive herbivores could reach up to 23 feet in length.
Christian Voigt / Senckenberg Naturmuseum / Frankfurt am Main
A Dysalotosaurus Lettowvorbecki from the Museum für Naturkunde in Berlin. The name means "uncatchable lizard."