You can read dinosaur books, watch dinosaurs on T-V, you can go to museums, you can do A LOT OF THINGS! You can see if there are any paleontologists at the mueseum(I wouldn't recommend this because they might not be there and they get very tired) or you can ask any dinosaur genius, like me, but not just me. I'm a paleontologist in training(technically not in training, but I'm too young for a job), and i get tired, too. Here's a website for you:pubs.usgs.gov/gip/dinosaurs
They do not learn anything, they are extinct.
I know about dinosaurs and their habitats from reading about them. Scientists learn about dinosaurs and their habitats by studying fossils.
So we can learn more about the past and what lived in the past.
All terrestrial vertebrates require some form of sleep. We can't learn about how dinosaurs slept from their fossils, but because birds and crocodiles, their closest relatives, sleep, it is safe to assume all dinosaurs did, too.
Scientists learn about dinosaurs by studying their fossils and those of other contemporary organisms. This helps them to learn what a dinosaur looked like, what it ate, and what its adaptations were. They also learn about what the climate, plant life, and other animals it interacted with were like. Fossils such as those of eggs, nests, and footprints can leave clues as to a dinosaur's social behavior.
Birds are the only surviving example of dinosaurs. Some extinct herbivorous dinosaurs include sauropods, ankylosaurs, stegosaurs, hadrosaurs, hypsilophodonts, iguanodonts, and therizinosaurs. Examples of extinct carnivorous dinosaurs include Tyrannosaurs, oviraptorids, Troodon, Allosaurus, and Carnotaurs. See the related links to learn more about each of these.
Approximately 700 Species have been named. Alligators and Crocodiles ARE NOT dinosaurs! However, Birds are largely considered to be the ancestors of saurischian dinosaurs and therefore could be said to be dinosaurs.
i think it was my balls because they survived in were the dinosaurs were alive and then my balls were part of the Aztecs and also the king. =)
You don't have to, but it is an interesting subject because you get to learn about the creatures that lived before us here on our planet.
Humans can learn the importance of adaptability in the face of environmental challenges, the impact of mass extinction events on ecosystems, and the fragility of life on Earth. Studying the extinction of dinosaurs can also highlight the significance of conservation efforts to prevent future extinctions.
The dinosaurs were a group of prehistoric reptiles that ruled Earth for about 160 million years. People did not even know dinosaurs existed until the 1800's. That may seem like a long time ago, but it is a very short time when you remember how long ago the dinosaurs lived-more than 65 million years ago. There is much still to learn, and the scientists of the future-the students of today-may be the ones who solve the mysteries of the dinosaurs.
i don't know for sure but most wind dinosaurs learn mayfly at level 55