there is now more of a theory that the dinosaurs were mostly warm blooded so most dinosaurs regulaited body heat the same way that we and most mammals do.
Some animals have bodies that can control their own body temperatures. Some animals have to find shade or water to control their body temperature.
not yes, because some of the dinosaurs have strong bones. Some dinosaurs have strong bones in their body but sometimes some of their body parts are weak!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Some dinosaurs did have spines but most did not. The main body coverings of most dinosaurs were scales and feathers.
Dinosaurs are extinct, so they do not lay eggs anymore. They developed from the reptiles but were not reptiles themselves, because they could regulate their body temperature to some extent. Yes. All dinosaurs do beause they are reptiles
Dinosaurs had a variety of body coverings, most commonly scales or feathers. Some dinosaurs, like T. rex, had scales, while others, like Velociraptor, had feathers for insulation and display purposes. The specific type of body covering varied depending on the species of dinosaur.
Some animals control their body temperatures by sweating or panting. Others use behavioural means, such as going into the shade and reducing physical activity. Some animals have capillaries close to the surface of their skin, which helps to cool their blood (animals such as kangaroos lick the surface above these capillaries to increase the effect).
Vertebrates regulate their body temperature through a process called thermoregulation. This can involve behaviors like seeking shade or sun, and physiological processes like shivering or sweating. Some vertebrates are able to maintain a constant body temperature regardless of the external environment (endotherms), while others rely on their surroundings to regulate their temperature (ectotherms).
No. Mammals are defined as being warm blooded. However, some mammals (such as the vampire bat or the naked mole rat) have inefficient body temperature control, meaning that their body temperature is prone to dropping below optimum temperature.
Your pores and sweat glands keep your body at the right temperature, that why when you get the flew you sweat allot and feel like there's heat coming off of your body.The body temperature control itself in a few ways. Some of the ways are skin, brain and cells.
Thermoregulation is the term we give to "temperature control" or the like. For example, the human body likes to run at an internal temperature of 98.6 degrees Fahrenheit. And we have mechanisms within us that control our internal temperature. The biochemical structures that accomplish this are collectively termed the thermoregulation mechanism of the body. Other animals have them, too, but some lack them - like reptiles. A link is provided below.
Some medication may affect body temperature. It can increase or decrease body temperature. I.e. tylenol may decrease temperature if you have fever. Some stimulant may increase temperature when used, etc.
Mammals, including humans, did not evolve from dinosaurs. So we don't have dinosaur DNA. However, if you are what you eat, and you eat chicken, than some of the material in your body came from a dinosaur, because birds are dinosaurs.