That is because no one is really sure, although it seems evident.
It's difficult to say at this point. A lot of the largest and possibly tallest dinosaurs aren't very complete.
Brachiosaurus is still the most complete large dinosaur which we can say with reasonable certainly was tall. It might have been able to reach about 14m in height if it's posed with an elevated neck.
There is another brachiosaur called Sauroposeidon which is only known from 4 neck bones. These are very long (the largest bone is 1.4m long). It suggests a dinosaur with a 11 to 12m neck. There are a lot of uncertainties as to what the rest of it looked like so it's default to know exactly how tall it was. Assuming its body was built like that of Brachiosaurus, and it held its neck in an elevated pose, it might have been able to reach about 17m in height.
Sauropoisedon
suropods.
During Romeo and Juliet's time period (late 16th century), England was experiencing social and political changes, such as the Elizabethan era with Queen Elizabeth I on the throne. The period was marked by a flourishing of the arts and literature, including the works of William Shakespeare. There were also religious tensions and conflicts between Catholics and Protestants.
"Everybody walks the dinosaur" is a lyric from the song "Walk the Dinosaur" by Was (Not Was). It is often interpreted as a metaphor for being yourself or having confidence in who you are, as the song's upbeat tempo and catchy chorus encourage listeners to embrace their uniqueness and have fun.
It is called "A First Book for Bedtime" written by AJ Wood and illustrated by David Antsey. Part of the Preschool Dinosaur Playhouse series?
ISBN # 0-87449-193-2
It was my son's favorite when he was a boy and I was looking for the title on the internet when I found your question. I knew I still had it somewhere, hope this info helps.
The Dinosaur Cove book series follows the adventures of two boys who discover a hidden gateway to a prehistoric world. They embark on exciting journeys where they encounter various dinosaurs and face thrilling challenges in their quest to survive and find a way back home. The series combines elements of paleontology, time-travel, and friendship to engage young readers in a world of adventure and discovery.
The tallest known dinosaur was the Sauroposeidon, estimated to have stood around 60 feet tall.
The longest dinosaur name is Micropachycephalosaurus which is 23 letters long.
(pronounced MY-cro-PACK-ee-SEF-ah-lo-SAWR-us)
The Micropachycephalosaurus (meaning "tiny thick-headed lizard") was a very small pachycephalosaurid, a thick-skulled, plant-eating ornithischian dinosaur. It was about 1.5-3 feet (0.5-1 m) long and weighed roughly 22-33 pounds (10-15 kg). It lived during the late Cretaceous period, about 83 to 73 million years ago. Its fossils have been found in China; only a very incomplete specimen has been found.
The Micropachycephalosaurus was named in 1978 by the Chinese paleontologist Dong. The type species is M. hongtuyanensis.
Mapusaurus is the biggest meat-eater in the world. look at http://www.technewsworld.com/story/50042.html
Humans evolved from mammals like dinosaurs such as dimetrodon.
All Vertebrate's evolved from the sea, Dinosaurs and Humans alike (the first were neither Reptiles nor Mammals but Tetrapods). These Tetrapods were the first to make the move from ocean to land:
At the time of the Dinosaurs the only Mammals were tiny mouse like creatures unable to increase in size and complexity due to the domination of the Dinosaurs - that small size helped the early mammals to survive underground whilst the Dinos perished during the extinction event. And the rest, is history!
There is not a dinosaur that I know is living to this day but there are animals that have descended from the dinosaurs.
Here is an easy way to answer your question:
http://tinyurl.com/dzcwwz
99%.
The remaining 1% of the dinosaurs that lived on were the birds.
Technically, you could say all of the dinosaurs died out, as in all of their species, because all the bird species alive back then are not around today.
Yes, and they still do. Birds are now recognized as the only living dinosaurs. Aside from that, no. Non-avian dinosaurs died out long before the first humans walked the Earth.
K = Cretaceous (C is used for another era already)
T = Tertiary
That would describe the Stegosaurus a thyreophoran dinosaur.
It needs to be clearly understood that many dinosaurs died in the global flood of Noah's day. Secondly, it is also highly likely that there were representative kinds of dinosaurs, most likely young specimens, taken aboard the ark. There is absolutely no reason to assume that they weren't taken aboard, as they would have been included in the 'two of every kind' that God brought to Noah, to preserve genetic diversity on the earth.
Also, it must be remembered that the climate of the earth underwent drastic change due to the processes associated with the flood, including the ice-age which followed it. As a part of this process, the dinosaurs which went off the ark most likely then became extinct. It is interesting to note in this connection, the widespread existence of 'monster' or 'dragon' accounts, commonly interpreted as legends among many of the people groups of the earth, including in China and some quite recent accounts from England.
So, to quite simply summarize the answer: Noah took dinosaurs on the ark. Secondly they became extinct afterwards, in the drastically altered post-flood environment.
They must have been on the ark probably as adolescents to compensate for their size.
In fiction, there are very many amounts of dragons of various description. This question is like asking
"What does a shoeprint look like?" They are very varied and it would depend on the type of dragon/shoe in question. For example, a typical dragon such as a wyvern would have large, lizard-like footprints at assumption, but the amphithere has no feet at all. I'm leaving the below comment because I find it funny. :D
A better answer would be: It all depends on which shoes my mother-in-law is wearing. :-)
Southern England was the location for some of the earliest dinosaur fossil discoveries. Indeed, the first dinosaur bone ever to be described in scientific literature, part of a femur, possibly from the large meat-eating theropod Megalosaurus, was recovered from a limestone quarry near Chipping Norton in Oxfordshire in 1676.
Source: The Guardian Newspaper
Diego is a Smilodon. The Smilodon is more commonly called the Saber-Toothed cat, which is an ancestor of modern lions and tigers, even closely resembling the Liger in images and size (except for the fangs, of course).
Tennessee has a state fossil - the bivalve mollusc, Pterotrigonia thoracica. It is from the Late Cretaceous.
Five types of dinosaurs are sauropods, carnosaurs, therapods, ceratopsians and hadrosaurs
the differenses between triassic period and the jurassic period is that idk i will have to think about it.
The Brachiosaurus Altithorax refers to a group of dinosaurs that lived in the Jurassic period. They are more commonly referred to as a brachiosaurus.