brown basilisk
Mrs. Norris was not killed, just petrified. The creature that did it to her was a baslisk, which is a giant snake. When you look into the eyes if a basilisk, it kills you. But, Moaning Myrtle had flooded the bathroom, so there was water on the ground. Mrs. Norris only saw the basilisk's reflection, so she was only petrified. :-)
there are 16 types fire, water, grass, thunder, fight, flying,ground, rock,steel, psychic, dark, ghost, normal, dragon, bug, ice and poison. make that 17
Ice types are supereffective and so are dragon types. Yes, dragon types ARE EFFECTIVE against dragon types. In some dual-type dragon pokemon, like Garchomp for example, Ice is 4x effective to it and Dragon types, 2x
Dragon types(Garchomp, Haxorus etc) Ice types (Froslass, Weavile etc)
Psychic and flying. dragon, flying,water, and psychicc Actually, just Psychic-Dragon.
well, it depends which type it is but if you say the mightiest dragon which is the Hungarian horntail dragon fights the mightiest serpernt which is the Basilisk in a battle i would recommend the horntail because it can fight in the air, water and on land whilst the Basilisk has to stay in water.
fast enough to run on water without sinking.
water dragon are more frindy and easy to tame
The scientific name for the lizard that walks on water is "Basiliscus basiliscus," commonly known as the Jesus Christ lizard due to its ability to run on the surface of water using its powerful hind legs.
No, nothing should be housed with a Beardie or water dragon, it stresses them out and they are known to fight
no, they often fight over territory
No - since they would never inter-breed in the wild, belonging to completely different countries and habitats !
it runs on water
yes
Dragon Ball Z - 1989 Water Fight 5-3 was released on: USA: 12 September 2001
The Basilisk Lizard in the rain forest under water the peranah trys to eat it
AnswerTypically it is a legendary creature (a serpent or dragon), but the name Basilisk has also been applied to a group of iguana-like lizards (Basiliscus), found on the banks of rivers and streams in Central and South America and Mexico.