This is a hard question.I actually do not know.(tip)You could go to the museum and ask someone.
Jurassic
Pangaea started to break up during the Triassic Period. It continued to split apart in the Jurassic Period and was almost complete in breaking up in the Cretaceous Period. After that it formed into the landmasses that we see today.
Pangaea started to break up during the Triassic Period. It continued to split apart in the Jurassic Period and was almost complete in breaking up in the Cretaceous Period. After that it formed into the landmasses that we see today.
During the Jurassic, all of the modern continents existed; Europe, Asia, Africa, North and South America, Australia, and Antarctica. Organisms lived on all of these continents.
in the Jurassic period the atmosphere was about 14.7. in the Jurassic period the atmosphere was about 14.7.
As far as I know there was no Ice age during the Jurassic era.
During the Jurassic era.
Pangaea is known as the super continent, a super continent is when all the continents fit together like a jigsaw puzzle. this theory was known by Alfred Wegener. so coming back to question during the mesozoic era Pangaea was no more. all the continents drifted apart during the mesozoic era.
The dinosaurs were the dominant land animals during the Jurassic and Cretaceous periods, rising to dominance during the late Triassic.
Earthquakes did appear during the Jurassic period along with volcano eruptions.
The Allosaurus lived 150 million years ago. That was during the Jurassic period. The Jurassic period was part of the Mesozoic era.
Dinosaurs.