About 85% of Iceland is Evangelical Lutheran. The other more common ones are Protestant and Roman Catholic.
Yes they do. They are extremely adaptable and can and do live in a variety of environments. However, they are more comfortable in warm climates so more reptiles are found in the temperate zones of the earth. Antarctica, Greenland, Iceland and some islands are among the only places on earth free of snakes as well as most other reptiles
Technically yes. Utahraptors are classified as dinosaurs and therefore reptiles. However they had more in common with birds than with modern reptiles.
No. In fact, Iceland is one of the safest countries in the world with 0.3 murders per 100,000 inhabitants (that is, 1 murder in all Iceland throughout the whole 2012), while Mexico has a murder rate of 22.7, or 25,757 murders throughout 2012. For comparison purposes, the US has a murder rate of 4.2, or 12,996 murders throughout 2012.
crocodilesalligatorsfrogsturtlesiguanasect.lizardsnakedragontortoisegeckochameleonbeardedThe reason why i kept on coming back to write more is that when keep on closing it i remember one more type/kind of reptile.Frogs are not reptiles but amphibians.
Yes. It however, is not usually referred as such; more common names include the Valley of Mexico or the Anahuac Valley.
No. Ponchos and sombreros are more common.
Reptiles
well,some reptiles do some don't but in the record there are more reptiles that have backbones
An Ancestral Character is a character inherited from a COMMON ancestor. For example the presence of lungs in mammals (an ancestral character) does not indicate that mammals are more closely related to amphibians vs. reptiles, or reptiles vs. birds etc., etc. It is simply a character inherited from a common ancestor.
No. Mexico is an independent country, south of the United States. More specifically, the country of Mexico shares a common border with the US states of California, Arizona, New Mexico and Texas.
Birds and small reptiles (including snakes) are sometimes preyed upon in the south, but this is rarely recorded in North America and more common in South and Central America.