The Velociraptor appears to have filled the niche of predator to medium sized dinosaurs. This is not necessarily a completely unique niche. Many raptors, including Arctic Troodontids, may have hunted large dinosaurs by working in a pack.
Yes they hunt and live in a pack
No, velociraptor lived in Asia.
Velociraptor live in the late Cretaceous period about 70 million years ago.
Velociraptor belongs to the subfamily Velociraptorinae, the clade Eudromaeosauria. Eudromaeosauria belongs to the family Dromaeosauridae. If you are asking what a Velociraptor pack was like, there is no evidence that Velociraptor even lived in groups. In fact, they were probably solitary.
Velociraptor definitely didn't live to be 100. They probably lived less 15 or 20 years maximum, if they were lucky enough not to be killed by something before that.
it could run at speeds of 80 mph and had a curved claw.
The scientific name for a velociraptor is velociraptor monogoliensis.
because they hunt in packs and have special parts in their mouth that allow them to call others.
it is a type of a horned dinosaur that has no horns. But other properties make part of the horned dinosaurs.
Velociraptor is a type of dinosaur. There are no living dinosaurs today, in any country. All known velociraptor remains have been found in Mongolia and northern China.
Velociraptor probably lived less than twenty years maximum, maybe as little as 15. Velociraptor was warm blooded, and it was a small carnivore. Small, warm blooded carnivores don't usually live very long today, and theropod dinosaurs, which were related to Velociraptor, such as Tyrannosaurus and Allosaurus, lived less than 30 years. If you are asking how long the species existed, their fossils date to between 75 and 71 million years ago, meaning that they existed for about 4 million years.
Yes velociraptor is intelligent
In 2008, a new species of Velociraptor was discovered in the Chinese region called Inner Mongolia. The new species is called Velociraptor osmolskae. The other species of Velociraptor is Velociraptor mongoliensis.