Mammals first evolved during the Mesozoic, the age of dinosaurs. After the dinosaurs died out, the Cenozoic began and mammals diversified until they dominated the land. Currently, we still live in the Cenozoic, so, technically, the Cenozoic could be called "the age of mammals."
the last 65 million years is called the age of mammals
A series of Ice Age
Yes. The first mammals appeared only about ten million years after the first dinosaurs in the Triassic period.
Animals are not characteristic of the Cenozoic Period is a false statement. The Cenozoic Period is often referred to as the Age of Mammals.
All mammals present today are example of tertiary period mammals as we are living in tertiary period .
The gestational period for a mammal varies. Smaller mammals tend to have a shorter gestational period than larger mammals.
No. For almost all mammals, the gestation period will be consistent regardless of the age of the male or female parent.
The Cenozoic Era is the Age of Mammals!
The Cenozoic Era is the Age of Mammals!
The current era is the "great age of mammals," the Cenozoic. The Mesozoic was the age of dinosaurs.
It is the time period when the world started to cool. Reptiles died back and mammals became and still are the most prolific of the animals on the planet.
No. Mammoths are from the ice age not the Mesozoic era (dinosaur age).