no
Platypuses are not dinosaurs; nor are they related to dinosaurs.
Luck - being in the right place at the right time. The modern platypus is nothing like old enough to have been around with the dinosaurs though - oldeset fossil - around 100,000 years - dinosaurs were here something like 230 million years ago.- ANSWER 2: The above is not strictly correct. Platypus fossils indicate that earlier platypuses were very similar to modern platypuses, only bigger, while tuataras have, of course, remained virtually unchanged since they walked with dinosaurs. It would seem that climatic conditions enabled these two creatures to continue to exist. Unlike the dinosaurs, they were not affected by changes further down the food chain. Further, their isolation from the rest of the world enabled them to thrive without the constant threat of predators.
Yes. Platypuses are monotremes, or egg-laying mammals. Female platypuses incubate their eggs. They do this by curling tightly around the eggs for around ten says, until they hatch.
dinosaurs because there were no humans around when the dinosaurs were around.
no one did there was not people around when dinosaurs were around
yes. some squids were even around before the dinosaurs ruled
Yes. Most scientist's actually believe that the tortoises were around before the dinosaurs.
No. Bears came well after the period of the dinosaurs. Bears never existed when the dinosaurs were around.
Hang around. Eat, sleep, have sex and produce little baby dinosaurs. You know how it is.
No. America does not have platypuses. Platypuses are endemic to eastern Australia.
Humans and dinosaurs were not alive at the same time. Humans came after dinosaurs were already extinct.
'Maturity' is considered to be reproductive age. Platypuses reach reproductive age at around two years old. This is the case for both males and females.