Modern-day ammonites do not exist, as they are an extinct group of marine mollusks that thrived during the Mesozoic Era. They are closely related to today's cephalopods, such as squids and octopuses. While ammonites themselves are gone, their lineage has evolved into various living cephalopod species, which inhabit oceans worldwide.
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i think number two
ammonites
yes they do
There are 751 modern day Samaritans. They live mostly in Tel Aviv and surrounding areas and they speak Hebrew and Arabic. The Samaritans prefer the term Isrealites to describe themselves.
ammonites are extinct
in your fat belly
The people of Ammon live in modern-day Jordan, specifically in the region known as Ammon or Ammonite country. This area in northern Jordan was historically inhabited by the Ammonites, an ancient Semitic people mentioned in the Bible.
No, the Japanese are a modern ethnic group of people from Japan. Ammonites are ancient marine animals that went extinct millions of years ago.
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They were invertebrates. They were shelled molluscs, basically large sea snails.
Ammonites are members of the subclass Ammonoidea. They get their name from Pliny the Elder, a Roman historian, who called the ammonis cornua (meaning "horns of Ammon," referring to the Egyptian god who was often depicted wearing ram's horns).
Modern day Israel.
in the Mesozoic and Paleozoic era
i think number two
Alas, they live no more: they're all extinct. Died in the same catastrophe that killed the dinosaurs.
the atakapa lived near modern-day