No according to scientists calculations and years of exploring there are no more dinosaurs in the earth although i am sure millions of years ago there were lots of them in the jungle area of the equator .
It's an area in the Atlantic, Pacific, and Indian Oceans called the "Doldrums." It is a low pressure area along the equator caused when all the hot air along the equator rises very high and flows North or South. Eventually it comes back down in the horse latitudes, about 30 to 36 degrees North and South of the equator.Also, if you wanna know what is just the "area near the equator" alone, it is the tropical zone.
Laos is in a tropical area, closer to the equator than Portugal.
There were no dinosaurs in medieval times.
how do you make a full park of dinosaurs that i guess get lots of bones or lots of things about of dinosaurs
Abdul Austin is awsome
Harry and His Bucket Full of Dinosaurs - 2005 Jungle Harry 2-34 is rated/received certificates of: Australia:G
The equator is a line, so it has zero area.
At the higher altitudes, yes, but it depends on the distance from the Equator as well.
Grazing dinosaurs typically roamed the savannas taking advantage of the ease of spotting predators and the plentiful grazing opportunities. These dinosaurs were typically herbivores and omnivores, rather than carnivores.They lived everywhere.
its in the jungle
Dinosaurs evolved in deserts, but as habitats changed they adapted. They lived in forests from the Arctic to the Equator, as well as floodplains, swamps, and arid plains.
North of the Equator
The area around the equator where trade winds meet are called
The Atlantic Ocean
The most of tropical countries have jungle. That is, these which are situated around equator.
The hemisphere north of the equator is called the Northern Hemisphere.
Equator