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One Million BC Header.jpg

In 1977, Mego released the One Million B.C. toy line, which consisted of five caveman action figures (Grok, Trag, Orm, Zon, and Mada) and three prehistoric animals (the Hairy Rhino, the Dimetrodon Sailback Dinosaur, and the Tyrannosaurus Rex).

Grok Header.png
Trag Header.png
Trag.png
Orm Header.png
Orm.png
Zon Header.png
Zon.png
Mada Header.png
Mada.png
Hairy Rhino Header.jpg
Rhino
Grok
Trag
Orm
Zon
Mada

The Hairy Rhino was one of three prehistoric animals released as part of the One Million B.C. toy line. It is a hard plastic toy with metal plates on one side. The figures came with foam darts with magnetic ends ("spears") that stick to the metal plates.

A wheel on the opposite side makes a "roaring dino-sound" when turned.

Rhino Right.png

The head is removable. It attaches to the body with a metal clip. A heavy bolt on the end of the head allows it to "bobble."

The legs do not move, but there are ball-bearings under the feet so it can roll.

Sailback
Dimetrodon Header.jpg

The Dimetrodon Sailback Dinosaur was one of three prehistoric animals released as part of the One Million B.C. toy line. It is a hard plastic toy with metal plates on one side. The figures came with foam darts with magnetic ends ("spears") that stick to the metal plates.

Dimetrodon Right Side.png

A wheel on the opposite side makes a "roaring dino-sound" when turned.

Dimotrodon Left Side.png

The head is removable. It attaches to the body with a metal clip. A heavy bolt on the end of the head allows it to "bobble."

Dimetrodon Head.png

The legs do not move, but there are ball-bearings under the feet so it can roll.

Dimetrodon Bottom.png
T-Rex
T-Rex Header.jpg

The Tyrannosaurus Rex was one of three prehistoric animals released as part of the One Million B.C. toy line. It is a hard plastic toy with metal plates on the front and one side. The figures came with foam darts with magnetic ends ("spears") that stick to the metal plates.

A wheel on the opposite side makes a "roaring dino-sound" when turned.

The head is removable. It attaches to the body with two metal prongs on either side of the neck. A heavy bolt on the end of the head allows it to "bobble."

Unlike the other two animals, the Tyrannosaurus Rex's arms and legs move, and there are no ball-bearings under the feet.

T-Rex Front (2).png
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