no, there was only sand
Of course Yes I hope it helped. xD
The water that was around when dinosaurs roamed the earth is not the same water that we have today. Water is constantly cycling through the environment in processes like evaporation, precipitation, and runoff. This means that the water molecules in the oceans, rivers, and lakes today have been through multiple cycles and are not the exact same ones that existed millions of years ago.
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.
Figuratively dinosaurs are still alive in animals such as Aligaters and Birds but if you mean like t-rexes and stuff like that it was about 300 millon years ago
Yes. They're called "birds".
Creatures from way back when refer to prehistoric animals that lived millions of years ago, such as dinosaurs, mammoths, and saber-toothed cats. These creatures roamed the Earth during different geological periods, like the Mesozoic era for dinosaurs and the Pleistocene epoch for mammoths. Fossils and scientific studies help us understand the behaviors and characteristics of these ancient creatures.
The fossils of a dinosaur called Hadrosaurus was found in New Jersey. Hadrosaurus is the state dinosaur of New Jersey.
the polar bear will be extinct soonDinosaurs that once roamed the earth are now extinct.
Yes
No, the Earth now does not look the same as before. There used to be one giant continent, not 7 continents. Glaciers came down from Canada to below the Great Lakes--the glacier moving created the basins for each of the Great Lakes. Water covered the middle of the US. Thick forests with high humidity covered most of the land where dinosaurs roamed the US. And this only describes US !Now, scientists say the continents are moving toward each other again, very slowly.
That is technically impossible because dinosaurs are extinct and that means that they are gone.
Dinosaurs and mammals coexisted during the Mesozoic era. If you count birds as dinosaurs, then they still coexist now in the Cenozoic.