Dinosaurs most resemble birds and reptiles but mainly birds because birds evolved from dinosaurs.
dinosaur+earth=fossil dinosaur=egg+earth egg=stone+life
James William Gidley has written: 'Preliminary report on fossil vertebrates of the San Pedro Valley, Arizona, with descriptions of new species of Rodentia and Lagomorpha' -- subject(s): Fossil Lagomorpha, Fossil Rodents, Fossil Vertebrates, Lagomorpha, Fossil, Paleontology, Rodents, Fossil, Vertebrates, Fossil
no it is not
The research facilities at the Royal Tyrrell Museum house over 125,000 fossil vertebrates and invertebrates. Unfortunately the viewing collections are not made public.
go to reeses lab and talk to the people and someone will give you a fossil and it is a rare dinosaur
The dinosaur Otheniela was found in fossilized eggshells, making it an egg fossil.
A dinosaur fossil or chicken nuggets
Other fossils already placed in the fossil record, and similar animals living today. The key to the past is in the present, as my geology professor would say.
Bernhard Hauff has written: 'Das Holzmadenbuch' -- subject(s): Fossil Vertebrates, Paleontology, Vertebrates, Fossil
Assuming you meant a dinosaur fossil and an insect fossilized in amber, the difference is that the soft tissues of the insect remain whereas the dinosaur fossil shows only hard tissues such as bone and tooth. Additionally, the insect fossil is the actual insect, wheras the dinosaur fossil is a stone formation that was created by rock replacing the bones of the dinosaur.
Dinosaur Bones!
No. A triceratops is a dinosaur.