Cold Blooded Old Times was created on 1999-10-11.
Cobras are reptiles (as are all snakes) and hence, are cold blooded.
Yes. Snake Are Cold Blooded ten year old answer- well determined on how hot or cold the snake is, you can probably conclude the temperature. because a snake is cold. very cold I've held plenty. so, they are probs coldblooded however, you know a ... DOG or something is warm blooded because when you hold your dog your hands aren't cold unless you live in a snowy place and just came inside from playing in the snow. :P
In the zoologic/biologic sense, all horses are warm-blooded or endothermic. However, horse owners have historically recognized three types of horses: "hot blooded", "warm blooded" and "cold blooded" based upon the old system of equating the heat of the blood with temperament. A "hot blooded" horse was an excitable and active horse breed such as Arabians and Barbs. A "cold blooded" horse was a solid, quiet horse breed such as Friesans, Clydesdales and other draft-horse breeds. A "warm blooded" horse was the offspring of a cross between a "hot blooded" and a "cold blooded" horse, and was developed as the favored mount of a knight in armor as these horses had the size and stamina to carry an armored knight but picked up some of the speed and flexibility of the Arabian crossed into them. Currently, "warm blooded" horses account for most breeds in the world, ranging from the American Quarter Horse to the Thoroughbred. However, there is also a specific breed of horse called the Warmblood.
Old Times on the Mississippi was created in 1876.
The Old Times Building was created in 1928.
warm blooded.
Just Like Old Times was created in 1992.
Dinosaurs lived in Alaska and Antarctica. Although these places had no icecaps at the time, they still had cold winters, which a cold blooded animal could not have endured. We know they didn't simply migrate away, because young dinosaurs would not have been able to make such a migration until they were a few years old, and they would have had to survive the winters.Birds, which descended from dinosaurs, are warm blooded.Dinosaurs show signs of an active lifestyle, which is rare for animals that are cold blooded.The growth rate of juvenile dinosaurs more closely resembles that of warm blooded animals than cold blooded animals.
All invertebrates were considered " cold blooded " that is to say they control their body temperature by thermoregulation, using outside sources, rather than internal heat production (as in warm-blooded animals). However, some use other methods of creating body heat. The correct terms are "ectotherms" (organisms that do not create most of their own body heat), and "homeotherms" (organisms that maintain a more-or-less constant body temperature).
Im a sixteen year old guy who has a cold blooded car and it means when it is cold out side and i mean cold like gotta wear a jacket or something. When you start your car it will idle okay sometimes but will die if you dont pump on the gas. If its cold outside the engine is cold so if you want to just hop in the car and put it in drive you just cant b/c the car will die b/c the engine is to cold and the car will shut off on you. So you got to let the engine worm up before you can drive. Mostly happens with older cars
Yes. I have done it dozens of times. During the first week I wouldn't keep them out very long just for the chick's well being. They are cold blooded at this point so they aren't able to keep warm on their own. However as the chick ages it will be able to stay out for longer periods. By the time the chick is 3 weeks old it will be warm blooded and able to keep its body temperature up by moving around just as adult chickens do.
traditionally, a reptile is any amniote who belongs to the reptilia. they're generally defined as being "a group of tetrapods with an ectothermic ('cold-blooded') metabolism and amniotic development". however, dinosaurs, and therefore birds, do not fit all of these requirements, and birds are currently excluded from the traditional classification of a reptile. birds are dinosaurs, and as such, cladistically (the type of classifying organisms based on evolutionary relationships), are reptiles. reptiles are members of the group sauropsida, which includes all reptiles and their closest (now extinct) non-reptilian relatives.