Birds technically are a subgroup within dinosaurs. Seabirds spend time in the air, on land, and on or in the water. So the answer is yes.
What most people call "flying dinosaurs" were actually pterosaurs, flying reptiles that were unrelated to dinosaurs. However, birds are considered by most scientists to be a clade of dinosaurs, and thus birds are "flying dinosaurs."
There were no flying dinosaurs. All dinosaurs were strictly walking creatures.
There are no flying dinosaurs. All dinosaurs lived on land. You are thinking of pterosaurs. Some pterosaurs included Pterodactylus, Pteranodon, Dimorphodon, and Quetzalcolactus. There were crosses between dinosaurs and birds, though. Like, Archaeopteryx, for example, or Avisaurus. There were pterosaurs, too. Examples includes: Quetzalcoatlus, Rhamphorhnychus, Dimorphodon, Pteranodon, Pterodactylus and Sordes.
there were no types of water dinosaurs. Diosaurs only lived on land.
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Land. An Isthmus is a narrow strip of land.
Yes. The earliest birds evolved in the Late Jurassic and greatly diversified through the Cretaceous period, when the dinosaurs were still around.
land
Pterodactyls were not dinosaurs. They were flying reptiles.
Like other dinosaurs diplodocus was a land animal.
None. There were flying reptiles, but they weren't dinosaurs.
Dinosaurs were land dwellers, though some probably could swim it was not their main form of locomotion. However in the time of the dinosaurs there were also two classes of marine reptile that are now extinct. There where Icthyosaurs, which resembled dolphins, and Plesiosaurs, which had paddles for limbs, but these were separate from dinosaurs. As to flying, there were also flying reptiles during that time called pterosaurs. Again these were a group of animals separate from, but related to dinosaurs. However, one group of flying animals than many scientists now consider to be a branch of dinosaurs are the birds.