Yes. Here are 2 reasons:
Reason 1- Dinosaur eggs came in different sizes.
Reason 2- Dinosaur eggs came in different shapes, too.
And that's all.
When dinosaurs were alive, Raptors would not lay many eggs. On average, there were between 4-6 eggs for each litter.
Most, if not all, dinosaurs layed eggs.
All of them
All of them lay eggs.
the ostritch lays the biggest eggs today, but if dinosaurs were still alive they would lay the bigest eggs.
Yes, all dinosaurs do
Yes, dinosaurs all hatched from eggs laid by the females. However, we can not tell if any species were ovoviviparous like some modern reptiles.
Pretty much all dinosaurs lay eggs, so Spinosaurus likely did too.
yes All true dinosaurs were reptiles and laid eggs.
Dinosaurs reproduced just like chickens do.
Saltopus was a reptile and a close relative of dinosaurs. Because all dinosaurs and nearly all reptiles lay eggs, it is safe to say that Saltopus did, too, even though its eggs have never been found.
NO, they do not lay eggs. They give birth to young alive even though they are fish.