No. Dinosaurs died out 55 million years ago and the earliest humans evolved (EDIT: 3.5 million, not 35) 35 million years ago so they missed each other by 52.5 million years. Also, our actual species only dates back around 120,000 years.
No. Dinosaurs first appeared on earth about 230 million years ago and, apart from birds, went exticnt 65 million years ago. Human-like primates did not appear until about 5 million years ago, with Homo Sapiens evolving in the last 200,000 years.
No. The dinosaurs died off before anything like "people" were born; in fact, there's about a 60-million-year gap when there weren't EITHER dinosaurs or people on Earth.
No. The remote ancestors of humans even at the end of the "dinosaur age" were something like squirrels.
There were plants during the dinosaur age.
People during the Stone Age were simply referred to as "Stone Age people" or "Stone Age humans." They did not have specific names or titles as societies were small and mostly nomadic during this period.
No, the Mesozoic era was dominated by the dinosaurs.
Primitive mammals, with fur, did exist during the age of dinosaurs. It has sometimes been speculated that mammals caused or helped to cause the extinction of the dinosaurs by eating dinosaur eggs.
Well first Andrewsarchus wasn't a dinosaur or a reptile it was a placental mammal that lived after the dinosaurs during the ice age.
in the stone age.
cavemen
The dinosaur age is known as the Mesozoic era. It is divided into three periods, the Triassic, the Jurassic, and the Cretaceous. Each of those is further divided into stages. There are a total of 29 stages in the Mesozoic.
Cavemen were early humans who lived in prehistoric times, around 2.5 million years ago to about 10,000 years ago. They were known for their use of stone tools, hunting and gathering lifestyle, and basic social structures. They did not have advanced technologies like we do today.
They were stone age cavemen.
The stoneage.
there was no dogs in the dinosaur times