No, terror birds and humans did not coexist. Terror birds, belonging to the family Phorusrhacidae, lived primarily in South America until about 1.8 million years ago, while anatomically modern humans (Homo sapiens) appeared around 300,000 years ago. This significant time gap means that these large, flightless predators existed long before humans evolved. Thus, they never shared the same environment or timeline.
There are a great many different species of birds that coexist. Finches, robins, and blue birds all coexist with each other for example.
Terror birds are on the online game RuneScape.
Yes
terror birds eat any animal that they want to but mostly chunky animals
humans obviously
The earliest birds had toothed beaks. However, toothless birds did evolve and then coexist with toothed birds. The toothed ancestors of birds lived around 150 million years ago.
Dinosaurs and mammals coexisted during the Mesozoic era. If you count birds as dinosaurs, then they still coexist now in the Cenozoic.
Humans and nature could coexist, but in order to coexist indefinitely humans would have to treat the environment responsibly, like a caretaker. Humans cannot act irresponsibly, like polluting the environment with chemicals, having nuclear power plant meltdowns, clear cutting rain forests, putting chemicals in the air, etc. and expect the delicate balance of nature to last indefinitely.
Any bird is technically a dinosaur and Terror birds were the most similar to the actual beast of the Mesazoic. The body and stance of all species of terror bird were extremely similar to the body structure of therapod dinosaurs. Terror Birds were also very fast runners just like modern Ostriches and just like their Dromaeosaur ancestors.
Terror birds lived during the Conozoic, 62-2 million years ago. Most terror birds fossils found date back over 2 million years ago. Some believe these birds did not go extinct until 15,000 years ago, but research says otherwise.
Raccoons are not closely related to humans biologically. However, they have adapted to the presence of humans and have learned to coexist with them. Humans inadvertently provide shelter and food for the animals.
Yes. The earliest birds evolved in the Late Jurassic and greatly diversified through the Cretaceous period, when the dinosaurs were still around.