Yes. But it would take a very long time and a lot of dead people in the same place.
Skeleton of dinosaurs are buried much deeper than human skeletons, therefore this shows that Dinosaurs were alive hundreds of years ago.
no. many theories about the death of dinosaurs say they were hit by a huge asteriod or the loss of nutrition killed them and they were buried by dust, dirt and rocks over the years
Sauropods, who were plant-eating dinosaurs, used rocks to grind their food to aid in digestion. These rocks are called gastroliths.
The ash and rocks from the volcano.
Of curse there are, they are mainly located in sedimentary rocks, the only rocks in which fossils can be found.
You could see Dinosaurs of all kinds, and it was the end of the Mesozoic era so you could see a giant astroid plummet to earth. :)
Gastroliths were the smooth, rounded rocks that dinosaurs ingested to help them digest and grind their food. These rocks were swallowed and moved around in the stomach to break down tough plant material.
They were buried in the sand in a crouching position then sand and a pile of rocks would be used to cover them. they had no posesions put in with them as they did not own any thing valuable worth putting in.
no they're extinct
very swanmpish and a lot of plants and rocks in it
They are called gastroliths.
they decompose