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According to Don Glut, the T. rex's head was reused as Spot, the basement-dwelling pet dragon on the show "The Munsters."
Al Lewis, the show's "Grampa", claimed he & Fred Gwynne ("Herman Munster") made the prop themselves, but perhaps he was referring only to the dragon's tail.
A couple cover images for the James White short story, "Trouble with Emily" in which doctors work on a Brontosaurus-like alien dubbed "Emily."
When poor Karl Lykos absorbs the life energy from a mutant, his body transforms into a pterosaur-like form, whereupon the Sauron personality takes over.
Another comic for today. A story from "Doll Man" (a shrinking superhero) in which a bitter paleontologist decides to use a fossil dinosaur skeleton and combine it with tissues from living animals to rebuild a prehistoric animal. Sort of "Jurassic Park" from 1946.
Some of Jean Elder's illustrations to the Australian children's book "Whirlaway" (1937). The story features a girl named Helen and an elf-like being named Whirlaway who travel through the various epochs of prehistory.
Nothing like the beauty of vintage dinosaur toys. Here's an Imperial Parasaurolophus from the late 70s.
I had one, along with a crocodile-faced T. rex & a "Trachodon." Their hollowness meant that during play they consumed a lot of sand, belching it back up like dragon's breath.