No. In fact, humans evolved about 65 million years after all the dinosaurs died out. When the dinosaurs became extinct, mammals were given room to expand and diversify so that humans could eventually arise. During dinosaur times, mammals were forced to remain small and insignificant.
There were many fish that lived in the Mesozoic. Plesiosaurs, ichthyosaurs, and pterosaurs ate mainly fish, as well as dinosaurs in the spinosaur family. The first rays appeared in the Cretaceous, and sharks returned to being the dominant sea predators after the marine reptiles died out. Lepidotes scales have been found in Baryonyx skeletons. It was 2 feet long. Saurichthys was 3 feet long and ate small pterosaurs. Quetzalcoatlus's diet was composed mainly of Enchodus, a 5 foot fish with giant fangs Xiphactinus was a fierce killing machine. At 20 feet long, anything in the water would have been prey. Leedsichthys, over 50 feet long, was the largest fish that ever lived.
sharks
No, kangaroos did not live in the times of the dinnosoars
They were abundant on Earth during the Carboniferous.
Cryolophosaurus, from the early Jurassic.
They lived in monasteries
the Tripod fish is from the dinosaur age and is guessed to be in the Juarrassic period the tripod fish lives in deep sea areas
tents
No not really.
Galileo did not live in the Middle Ages. He lived during the Renaissance.
A Dinosaur Bird
no
Because most fish species live longer than a year. Therefore, in a healthy fish population fish of different ages and different sizes coexist.
no