no, there were a bunch of teeth
A few
The first Allosaurus was discovered in 1877 in Colorado and named by Othniel Charles Marsh. This specimen offered just a few fragments of the dinosaur.
Just go to the fossil center and revive a few fossils and then go and check it. If that didn't work go dig more fossils then revive them then check again.
because they're old
So few dinosaur fossils have been found in Antarctica because the entire continent is covered in ice, making it hard to dig and/or search for large fossils.
Fossils have been found with ages from a few tens of thousands of years old to roughly three billion years old.
So few dinosaur fossils have been found in Antarctica because the entire continent is covered in ice, making it hard to dig and/or search for large fossils.
The biggest problem with finding fossils in Antarctica is that everything is covered in ice, making it hard for archaeologists to excavate and find fossils.
The distance that fragments can be propelled by 75 pounds of explosive depends on the type of explosive and the surrounding environment. In general, fragments can be propelled up to a few hundred meters with that amount of explosive force.
To preserve a fossil you need very special conditions during a long time period. That is why there are only few places in which you can find fossils. Besides, is not easy doing this type of research in Antarctica. Do you imagine the cold?
This is because igneous and metamorphic rocks are created under extreme heat and pressure, and very few fossils would survive those conditions. The most common forms of fossils are those found in sedimentary rocks.
The earliest fossils are few because the conditions for fossilization, such as rapid burial and preservation, were not common in the early Earth. Additionally, these ancient organisms were likely small and soft-bodied, making them less likely to be preserved as fossils. The search for early fossils is also challenging due to the rocks from that time period being heavily altered or destroyed over billions of years.