Most likely the plant eaters died first, then the carnivores.
At the dawn of dinosaurs.
No, not all at once. Throughout the 150 million year "reign" of the dinosaurs, all kinds of groups of dinosaurs have flourished then died out. Dinosaurs living in the Triassic Period were not the same as dinosaurs living in the Cretaceous period. However, the final blow to the dinosaurs that caused them all to die out was the K-T mass extinction that occurred 65 million years ago.
Just like today, carnivorous animals in the Mesozoic needed a much larger population of herbivores than carnivores in order to survive. Therefor, there were far more herbivorous than carnivorous dinosaurs. One example of this was the fact that the most common large dinosaurs in the Cretaceous were hadrosaurs, a group of herbivores.
No. Turtle are from a branch of reptiles completely separate from dinosaurs.
dinosaurs are extinct not endangered
if temperature drops quick enough, plants die. if plants die, the dinosaurs that eat plants die. if those dinosaurs die, then the carnivorous meat-eating dinosaurs die. then, all dinosaurs die.
Dinosaurs Don't Die was created in 1975.
Birds are direct descendants of dinosaurs so they did not die out.
Yes
they saw you
They already did. All the dinosaurs died out 65 million years ago.
At the dawn of dinosaurs.
No
It isn't proven that the dinosaurs died from hunger. See the related question below.
AnswerYes, all the true dinosaurs died out approximately 64 million years ago. The nearest living relatives of dinosaurs are the birds.
Both anoles and dinosaurs belong to the diapsid group of reptiles. However, dinosaurs belonged to the order Dinosauria, and anoles are lizards, which are part of the Squamata order. Therefor, dinosaurs are distant relatives of anoles.
because you touch yourself at night