Yes, many dinosaur species, particularly theropods like modern birds, were likely precocial, meaning they could walk shortly after hatching. Fossil evidence suggests that some young dinosaurs were well-developed and capable of moving around to evade predators or find food soon after emerging from their eggs. However, the level of development at hatching varied among different dinosaur species, with some requiring more parental care and time to mature before becoming mobile.
they walk
Theropods were the main bipedal dinosaurs. However, some small ornithopods, like Orodromeus, were bipeds, and hadrosaurs could walk on two or four legs.
Dinosaurs
Dinosaurs that walk on two legs are called "bipeds". The term applies to all animals that walk on two legs.
If you walk out into the cold and then immediately walk into a burning hot place, you could get frost bite. BE CAREFUL!
No. At least not Homo Sapiens.
-Dinosaurs have thin/hollow bones, like birds. -Many dinosaurs take care of their young. -Dinosaurs can walk upright (some, at least). -The hip structure of dinosaurs is dissimilar to that of a lizard.
Killdeer chicks are precocial, meaning they are relatively mature and mobile shortly after hatching. They typically leave the nest within a few hours of hatching and can walk and forage for food almost immediately. However, they still rely on their parents for protection and guidance during their early days. Full independence usually comes a few weeks later.
from what i have read they walked on their toes.
Geologists think that in Dinosaur times there was just one big contient, which they call Pangaea ("All Earth"). Dinosaurs could walk from anywhere to anywhere else. The last dinosaurs died off about the time the supercontient finished breaking up into the six (or seven) continents we know today.
The ancestors of dinosaurs walked upright before they evolved into true dinosaurs. The earliest known dinosaur, Eoraptor, walked with upright legs underneath its body.
Any animal that walks on four legs is called quadrupedal. Quadrupedal dinosaurs include sauropods, stegosaurs, ceratopsians, and ankylosaurs. Hadrosaurs could were usually quadrupedal, but could walk, stand, or run on two legs.