Humans never ate dinosaurs. Dinosaurs died out 60 millions of years before humans were around.
There is no scientific evidence to support the existence of a giant human species in ancient history. Claims of giant humans are often based on myths, hoaxes, or misinterpretations of archaeological findings.
It is incorrect to refer to Neanderthals as "Neanderthals' world." Neanderthals were a species of ancient humans that existed in the Paleolithic era, while "Neanderthal" is often used to describe the species as a whole. "Neanderthal" and "Neanderthals' world" would not typically be used interchangeably in a documentary about them.
Invasive species. These are introduced species that disrupt the ecosystem they were introduced to, often outcompeting native species and causing harm to the environment.
No they do not. Only humans get chlamydia trachomatis. There are other chlamydia species that affect animals. Chlamydia psittaci is the chlamydia species that most often affects birds.
No - humanity is limited by species to Homo sapiens. While cats and dogs are often treated as members of the family by some humans, they are not humans.
Iguanodon is a genus of dinosaur with one currently accepted species. The scientific name, or Latin name, of this species is Iguanodon bernissartensis. Note that dinosaurs don't have "common" names. They are nearly always referred to by the name of their genus, such as Triceratops, Allosaurus, etc. One dinosaur, Tyrannosaurus rex, is often referred to by its full Latin name, Tyrannosaurus rex.
Yes, ancient civilizations categorized plants and animals based on their perceived usefulness to humans. This system helped societies identify which species were valuable for food, medicine, clothing, tools, or other practical purposes. These classifications often influenced cultural practices, trade networks, and agricultural development.
Humans are mammal therefore we are considered animals.
Homo Sapiens ARE normal humans. "Homo Sapiens" is the scientific taxonomical name for humans
The use of tools. The use of language. The use of invention. The question is rather futile. Mice are the most intelligent species, performing elegantly subtle experiments on humans. They are so subtle, humans often believe that they are in fact performing the experiments. Dolphins are the second smartest species, but they just spend all their time mucking about in the water. This is one of the reasons they themselves believe they are smarter than humans. Humans are the third smartest. Bloody stupid creatures if you ask me.
"Dino sapien" is a term often used to describe a fictional or hypothetical intelligent dinosaur, similar to how "homo sapiens" refers to modern humans. It is a concept found in stories, movies, and speculative science fiction about human-like dinosaurs coexisting with humans or evolving intelligence.
under the ground....they're a dinosaur.