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Q: What allowed gyumnosperms to dominate the Mezoic era along with reptiles?
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What Erawas there dinosaurs?

the mezoic era


Is there anything special about mammals?

Yes. They are the only surviving animals to give birth and have hair. In prehistoric times, marine reptiles from the Mezoic Era gave birth. In a periodic boundary near and in this Era, animals called thecodonts, or "mammal-like reptiles", had hair, too.


Archean and the Proterozoic Eons make up what?

Mezoic Time


Why might large dinosaurs not have survived the mezoic era?

Maybe you should look in your Science Book.....


What era did a megaraptor live in?

All dinosaurs lived in the same era of COURSE! The mezoic era.


Are their going to be any new Dinosaur related shows?

I'm annoyed as well, cause the last one on the BBC was Walking with Monsters (pre Mezoic) BUT Primeval on ITV is really good.


What period of geologic time is also known as the age of the dinosaurs?

The age of dinosaurs is called the mezoic. this consists of three eras-the creatous, jurrasic and the


What century the dinosaurs roamed the earth?

Dinosaurs did not roam the Earth in a "century" but from from roughly 250 million (Triassic Period) to 50 million (Cenozoic Era) years ago. A meteor hitting the Yucatan peninsula, about 60-70 million years ago, is theorized to have caused such global destruction immediately, and changed the climate so radically over the following millennia, that dinosaurs were eventually wiped out of the gene pool of the world. Dinosaurs roamed the earth for around 180 Million years. They first appeared during the begining of the Mezoic Era, approximately 240 million years ago, and were wiped out at the end of Mezoic Era, approximately 75 million years ago, although some modern speicies may be descendants of dinosaurs.


Is it possible to really make dragons?

With current technology cloning is not always successful, but it does frequently work. The largest problem facing someone trying to clone a prehistoric creature is that soft tissue is required for cloning, preferably red blood cells, and soft tissue almost always is not preserved. However, freezing does preserve soft tissue remarkably well, an example of this being the well-preserved mammoths recently discovered in a glacier. Cloning could theoretical be a possibility in this case, but no frozen dinosaurs have been found. This may largely be a result of the fact that the earth's climate during the Mezoic era was so much warmer than it is today. Another problem is to be able to clone anything (Dragons included) you not only need the DNA from a donor, but you also need a viable egg cell. Viable eggs come from living donors. Finding a compatible egg cell can prove difficult, which would inhibit any chances of reconstruction. (And good luck getting a viable egg cell from a female Dragon.)