Not that anyone knows of. Though theories have been proven wrong before, all Dinosaur fossils that have been observed have been from 65 million years ago or older.
No, there were no people in the time of the dinosaurs. Humans came about 3 million years ago and by then all the dinosaurs were extinct.
No. When the earth formed about 4.58 billion years ago there was no life at all. Dinosaurs did not appear until about 230 millions years ago, or about 4.56 billion years later.
Zoegrass
Well, some like to think that it was formed as a result of the same ice age that supposedly killed off the dinosaurs but it's impossible to know for sure.
According to most scientists, we have had virtually the same amount of water on Earth since the planet formed. That would mean that there was the same amount of water on Earth when the dinosaurs existed. However, it is important to note that there is probably an infinitesimal amount more water now then there was in the time of the dinosaurs, simply because of the fact that there have been meteors/meteorites that carried a little bit of water to Earth since the dinosaurs died out.
Yes because when we are not exist yet dinosaurs rule the earth but today there are no dinosaurs here.
No, dinosaurs are neither a hypothesis nor is there a "hypothesis of Earth".
purple dinosaurs did it...
The duration of When Dinosaurs Ruled the Earth is 1.6 hours.
Birds, which are not just considered descendants of dinosaurs; they are dinosaurs.
Dinosaurs first appeared in the tertiary stages of the Earth. Tertiary was when the dinosaurs ruled the earth. Then there was jurassic and then creteacious
Contrary to popular belief, oil does not come from dinosaurs. Oil is formed by algae that sinks to the bottom of the ocean and is then buried. Many oil deposits in the world predate the dinosaurs. Additionally, dinosaurs walked the earth for about 160 million years, which is more than enough time for algae to be buried and converted into oil.
Birds looked like cockroaches when dinosaurs ruled the earth.
Most likely, no. The Earth's core is far to hot for a community of dinosaurs to thrive.