ok. lets put it together here: dinosaur.
aquatic.
do you know what a dinosaur is? good. you should have answered yes.
aquatic. AQUA.
??Aquafina? what is aquafina? YES YOU'RE RIGHT! it's waaaater.
water.
dinosaur.
put it together.
(a dinosaur that lives in the water)
There is no such thing as an aquatic dinosaur. All members of the Class Dinosauria were strictly terrestrial, though some of the theropods may have been able to swim if forced to. No herbivorous dinosaur has a body type that would have allowed it to swim well, and the largest group, the Hadrosaurids (commonly referred to as "duckbill" dinosaurs) were physically incapable of swimming at all, due to their extreme bone density and lattice-work ribcage. Perhaps the closest thing to an aquatic dinosaur would be Baryonx, a small, fish-eating dinosaur related to spinosaurus.
The Ichthyosaurus, Elasmosaurus Platyurus, Kronosaurus, Tylosaurus, Mosasaurus, Ophthalmosaurus, Plesiosaurus, Nothosaurus, Liopleurodon, Shonisaurus.
amphibious dinosaurs
bob
Name of this semi-aquatic dinosaur is:- hadrosaur
It was an aquatic dinosaur.
egret
No the blue whale is an aquatic mammal
Some dinosaur names are: xenoceratops, xenoposeidon, xenotausersaurous, xiosauraus, and xuanhuaceratops.
The hadrosaurus was a dinosaur that walked on two legs and swam in the water. It had webbed feet and a duckbill. There were several species.
Hadrosaur is a duck billed dinosaur.
Some toys that are purple are Barney the Dinosaur, stuffed animals, and some Furby's are purple.
There were no aquatic dinosaurs. Some prehistoric marine reptiles are mistakenly called dinosaurs. These include plesiosaurs, pliosaurs, icthyosaurs, and mosasaurs.
a lot
Dinosaur names are typically capitalized when they refer to a specific genus or species, such as "Tyrannosaurus rex" or "Velociraptor mongoliensis." However, when referring to dinosaurs in a more general sense (e.g. "the carnivorous dinosaurs"), they are not capitalized.
No, some are fully aquatic some are semi-aquatic and some are terrestrial.