There are three reasons; Antarctica wasn't at the south pole in the early Jurassic and during the Cretaceous, there was more carbon dioxide in the atmosphere which pushed up temperatures so that dinosaurs were able to survive. Finally, some dinosaurs were believed to be warm blooded and have feathers which are adaptations to survive colder temperatures - birds, particularly penguins, live at the south pole today and there is strong evidence that modern birds have evolved from dinosaurs.
Well I'm not sure but the only thing that I know about dinosaur eggs that they are big and not sure if bird or reptile eggs are big
i DONT NOWPS YOUR WEBSITE IS the worst website to look up dinosaur facts for my homework
It WAS the ostrich egg, but one of the dinosaurs' eggs (which was also an ostrich) and it is called Arpeggionist.
In ovaries.
How long it took a dinosaur egg to hatch would be dependent on which species of dinosaur it was. Some eggs would have hatched much sooner than others. Dinosaurs whose hatchlings were larger and/or more developed would have most likely taken longer before hatching.
The first dinosaur fossil found in Antarctica was an ankylosaur. Cryolophosaurus was the first carnivorous dinosaur discovered on that continent, and its remains may have been identified before those of Antarctopelta.i remember it was cryolophasaurusThe first dinosaur to be discovered in Antarctica was the Antarctopelta oliveroi, an ankylosaurian dinosaur. However, it was the second one to be named. The first dinosaur to be named was the Cryolophosaurus ellioti, a species of theropod dinosaur that had a crest.
Dinosaur eggs were 1st found in the Flaming Cliffs, Gobi Desert.
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.
The Gobi Desert.
i think some scientist may have found some, but, logically, no
oviraptor bones and protoceratops eggs
The only ones of which I am aware where eggs of Protoceratops, a very earl, dog-sized ceratopsian dinosaur, a progenitor of the huge upper Cretaceous ceratopsians such as Styracosaurus and Triceratops.
No one knows what true dinosaur eggs smell like. Fossilized dinosaur eggs may smell like the earth that they were located in.
Sid the sloth "adopts" the dinosaur eggs.
Well I'm not sure but the only thing that I know about dinosaur eggs that they are big and not sure if bird or reptile eggs are big
I think there are some authentic dinosaur eggs left in the world.
Stone + life = eggs eggs +earth = dinosaur Dinosaur + air = [ dragon ]