You can follow the footprints to find the quetzalcoatlus.
A hypotheses is a possible answer to a scientific question or explanation for a set of observations.
Yes
relevant to a hypothesis, either positively or negatively. 2.2 Hypotheses and Sub-hypotheses Hypotheses are questions or conjectures of interest to an observer. Hypotheses may involve alternative possible explanations, possible answers, or alternative estimates. Hypotheses may have substructure. It is sometimes possible to partition a high-level hypothesis into a set of sub-hypotheses. The substructure decomposition is always a hierarchical tree. The hierarchy may be several levels deep before bottoming out in questions that can be directly assessed and answered by evidence.
It was not possible for a male dinosaur to lay eggs. That would be like getting a male dog to have puppies... It's not physiologically possible.
=yes=
Any part of the body can be preserved as a fossil. The most common parts of the body to be fossilised are the hard parts such as claws, teeth and bones but it is also possible to fossilise soft tissue as well. One example of Thescelosaurus shows extensive soft tissue fossilisation. It was given the nick name of "Willo" the dinosaur with a heart.
The volcano that made the Laetoli footprints possible is the nearby Sadiman volcano, which erupted about 3.6 million years ago and covered the site with a layer of ash. This ash then hardened, preserving the footprints made by early hominins as they walked across the area.
Its possible because when the volcano erupts the magma from the volcano runs through the area and picks up things along the way and when it settles the things get preserved
Ligament attachments are preserved as much as possible
Hope that I stay in the dream for as long as possible. It would be awesome.
Yes, fossilisation is a rare process especially on land. There will have been many species not preserved as fossils but it would be impossible to prove as there are no remains. It is also possible that many species were preserved in rocks but, due to tectonic processes, they were obliterated as the rocks were metamorphosed.
No.