Yes, as a matter a fact, dinosaurs did drink water too.
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.
The Water Cycle is the cycle at which water precipitates, evaporates, and condenses. This cycle has been going on since the beginning of time. As a result, there is no such thing as 'new' water. The water you are drinking could be from the dinosaurs time, from a glacier or lake that was present at that time period. Of course, the water is cleaned, purified, bottled and sold.
Yes, dinosaurs did live in the water.
Yes, during the time of the dinosaurs, there was more land than water on Earth. The supercontinent Pangaea existed during the Mesozoic era, which was the time when dinosaurs lived. As Pangaea broke apart, it eventually led to the formation of the continents we have today.
I guess water dinosaurs did :)
No dinosaurs specifically lived in the water. Plesiosaurs, pliosaurs, mosasaurs and ichthyosaurs lived in the water (but are not DINOSAURS). They are reptiles but not dinosaurs. They co-inhabited the planet with dinosaurs, in the same way that the pterosaurs ruled the air. Pterosaurs were not dinosaurs either.
No dinosaurs lived in water. The prehistoric reptiles that lived in water were the Plesiosaurs, not dinosaurs.
In the Time of Dinosaurs has 229 pages.
In the Time of Dinosaurs was created in 1998-06.
Many dinosaurs ate meat. Some are Allosaurus and Tyrannosaurus rex. No dinosaurs lived in water
Dinosaurs were strictly land animals. Living at the same time as the dinosaurs were other reptiles adapted to the water. Probably because these creatures occupied the water niches, no dinosaurs (that we know of) "went back" to the water as did the mammals -- whales and dolphins, seals and sealions, walruses, sea cows, otters and beavers.
Dinosaurs were all terrestrial creatures, although a few, such as Spinosaurus and Baryonyx, specialized in freshwater fishing. Large marine reptiles that were not dinosaurs but existed at the same time include plesiosaurs, pliosaurs, icthyosaurs, and mosasaurs.