Yes. However, we have only found evidence that juveniles and adults were part of these herds. The hatchlings were probably left to fend for themselves until they grew large enough to keep up with a herd, and also to reach the same food. Some evidence suggests that young sauropods, including diplodocus, ate different foods then the adults. If this is so, it would be very inefficient and detrimental for all of them to travel together because they would need to go to different places for the young the adults to get their food.
no baryonix was alone hunter and you use the word "pack" not "herd"
Yes they did, along with a number of other large theropods. Other theropods thought to have hunted in packs are Albertosaurus, Allosaurus, Carcharodontosaurus and Mapusaurus.
It didn't move in herds because they would rather hunt all by them self's. They would probably move in a herd of two if they were looking for their kid.
Fossilized tracks show that Stegosaurus lived in herds with both juveniles and adults. This shows that Stegosaurus probably raised their offspring.
no they live buy themselves
it has a long neck
Diplodocus did not have a horn. Diplodocus was a sauropod walking on all four limbs with an extremely long neck and tail.
No, because Diplodocus didn't have horns. A horned dinosaur would be match to Triceratops.
diplodocus was long
Diplodocus
Diplodocus
Tyrannosaurus is a carnivore. Stegosaurus is considered an armored dinosaur, although its plates were probably minimally effective as armor. Trachodon was a hadrosaur, or duck billed dinosaur. Thus, the incorrect pairing is horned dinosaur and Diplodocus. Diplodocus didn't have any horns.
Seismosaurus is a dubious name. The dinosaur is actually called diplodocus. Diplodocus was far larger than Baryonyx.
Diplodocus was a huge dinosaur. Huge animals like them do not use shelter.
Diplodocus.
diplodocus
mamenchasaurus