Dear asker,
It depends on the dinosaur. Each species came in different shapes and sizes.
Ps - I'm not a scientist.
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I don't know much about dinosaurs, either.
However, by logical thinking, the possible length of a dinosaur's tongue, - additionally to the above statement -, might depend on the positional state of the tongue. For example, a stretched out tongue is expected to be longer then a curled up one or one that is turned towards either side of the cheeks.
That being, of course, only a contemplative suggestion, as finding fossilised dinosaurs' tongues, is not really easy at the present. But, nothing seems to be impssible as the added link explains.
Dinosaurs have long been extinct, making it impossible for scientists to work with living dinosaurs.
the living thing are dinosaurs,although the scientist can prove it to be real,but i'm sure it could be.
Archaeopteryx is considered the 1st Bird. It was from a long line of Avian dinosaurs which are very very closely related to the Raptor family of Therapod Dinosaurs. The morphology of avian dinosaurs and modern birds are so similar many scientist class birds as avian dinosaurs.
No, dinosaurs were not amphibians. Dinosaurs are classified as reptiles.
No and yes. Dinosaurs have long been extinct long long long before humans came about. However we live in close proximity to their descendants. Birds namely, so keep that in mind next time you see a robin or pigeon outside that it was descended from long extinct dinosaurs.
as long as an elephant tongue
no dinosaurs did not live on long island sound
They aren't extict. Birds are dinosaurs.
They have no tongue
Orcas have an extremely long, pink tongue, which is 3 feet long!
A giraffe's tongue can be up to 20 inches long!
Yes. Worms existed long before dinosaurs did.