One genus of tree that is still alive today and evolved in the Jurassic is the Sequoia, also known as the coast redwood. They first appeared in Manchuria, in China, but before the dinosaurs died out they lived throughout Asia, Europe, and North America.
No.
Jurassic Park
Jurassic Park is a Steven Spielberg movie about a park in which dinosaurs have been cloned back into existence. Jaws is another Spielberg film about a shark that attacks people.
As they did in "Jurassic Park"? Probably not. Maybe some day long from now, scientists will be able to engineer creatures very much like dinosaurs, but they won't be the real descendents of the real dinosaurs.
This is none, unless you hire a team to find fossils and then genetically engineer them back to life at your park
Math dates back more than 50,000. The exact origin is unknown. F@ck u
Creation Today - 2011 Taking the Dinosaurs Back - 3.13 was released on: USA:18 October 2013
Brazil =)
Sorry, but there is not living animal which is the same species it was during the Jurassic. Birds are avian dinosaurs, so they sort of count, but not really. The ancestors of modern-day gingko trees were incredibly common, and you can still find them in cities today. Even you did want to bring back a Jurassic dinosaur, the task is pretty much impossible, since no DNA evidence has ever been found in Cretaceous dinosaurs, let alone the older Jurassic fossils, and even if you did, the DNA would be so fragmented from molecular decay, that it would be like trying to put together a one billion piece puzzle.
The Stegosaurus is perhaps one of the most widely recognized dinosaurs due to its armored plates that ran along its back in two columns. The Stegosaurus lived 150 to 145 million years ago during the late Jurassic period.
the herbivores
In the second Jurassic Park movie, they feature a Spinosaurus, a large carnosaur with a "sail" on its back.