€15.00 – €120.00
- Measured from top of base to top of head
- Want size a little different? No problem, please write below!
- Need entirely other scale? Please mail us!
If the picture of the figure shows a base, then the figure will come with a base unless you request otherwise. If no base is shown in the picture, then you will need to request a base on the figure if you would like one.
The Greater Tapir is an extinct species of tapir that lived in North America during the Pleistocene epoch, about 2.6 million to 11,700 years ago. It was much larger than the modern-day tapirs, reaching up to 9 feet in length and weighing over 2,200 pounds. The greater tapir was a herbivore and lived in a variety of habitats, including forests, grasslands, and wetlands. It was a prey item for large carnivores such as the American lion and the short-faced bear. Fossils of the greater tapir have been found in many parts of the United States, providing important evidence for the evolution and extinction of large mammals in North America during the Pleistocene.
Artist: José Jorge Pereiro. For larger scales, print will be in parts.
This is a high quality miniature 3D printed by Speira Miniatures in Sweden.
You can paint it as any normal miniature, no need to wash it beforehand. It is delivered unpainted.
Usable for dioarama, wargaming or tabletop role-playing games, such as Dungeon and Dragons, Warhammer, Pathfinder and so on. Also great as decor in your home if you order the large scales. We can always transform any model into a bust if you like, please contact us.
Due to the inherit nature of 3D printing the miniatures might contain imperfections and could require additional cleanup where the support have been; use sand paper or green putty for example. Print layers will sometimes be visable.
3D resin is brittle, even if we use a mixture than makes it more flexible. However it cannot be compared with the normal plastic that is used for example Warhammer, Marx or Conte miniatures. Handle the 3D prints with care, a fall can break them. Glue info here.