Strong,weak,tall and short.
When the massive comet hit earth which made a massive explosion and vibrated the land+water and wiped out every single dinosaur, they died right where they were standing. Their bones were the only things that were left behind. That's why us humans found these bones and put each piece together and put it in the museum.
sometimes you can tell what they ate by what animal bones are round the area and you can also tell the way they walked by the shape of there feet we can also carbonate the bones to tell us how old they are.
this doesnt tell us much infact it tells us nothing except that a meteor landed there or a chunk of that meteor landed there
It can tell us that they died back then, too.
They dont. No one knows how dinosaurs live. It is all made up depending on their size and other things.
The oracle bones tell us that when you burn them, there are cracks. The Chinese thought that the gods are trying to tell them something. The cracks also make the Chinese handwriting used today.
It tells us what the Chinese believed in and it taught us more about ancient China's culture.
The bones can tell the age of the person, manner of death, diet, and genetic identity.
they tell the history wat happend to our earth and who first inhabbited this place before us
Tell your spouse to come to the US, or send him the papers.
The bones tell us whether the extinct animal was a reptile, mammal, dinosaur, fish, or amphibian. If we find feather impressions that helps us further distinguish between birds and dinosaurs, although some dinosaurs had feathers. From more recently extinct animals we have recovered DNA. We have about half of the woolly mammoth DNA sequenced, and we also have the hide and fur of thylacine--an extinct marsupial "tiger." We also have dinosaur footprints and tracks, fossil eggs, and coprolites (fossilzed feces).
Dinosaur skeletons say a lot about dinosaurs. Nearly all knowledge of dinosaurs comes from their skeletons. Skeletons tell us: -How large the dinosaur was -The shape of the teeth tells what the dinosaur most likely ate (sharp teeth are typically used for tearing flesh, and molars are typically used for grinding plant material.) -Horns and frills suggest how the dinosaur might have defended itself or attacked other dinosaurs -Nasal cavities show where the nose would have been on the dinosaur, and if it had one -Auditory cavities show the location of the ear Skeletons sometimes require some interpretation, and paleontology is constantly increasing its understanding of dinosaurs. Sometimes paleontologists misinterpret bones. For example, the sharp spike on the front leg of the Iguanodon was initially believed to be a horn. When more skeletons were found, scientists realized their mistake. Sometimes new technology or fresh observations or new specimen also give new information. It was only recently that velociraptors were discovered to have feathers. Paleontologists found little grooves in the bones of the forearm that were alike enough to grooves on the bones of currently living organisms with feathers.