In the Steven Spielberg movie Jurassic Park they planned to only breed females so that the dinosaurs could not breed without the direct intervention of the geneticists.
Lysine is essential for growth and functionality. In Jurassic Park, the dinosaurs were on a strict, lysine rich diet and this prevented them from dying. However, the lysine contingency that Robert Muldon refers to is the fact that if the dinosaurs were to "escape", without this lysine rich diet, they would go into a coma and shortly die. This was probably for safety and copyright reasons (to prevent anybody from stealing Ingen's dinosaurs).
Your Dinosaurs would escape Wrong. The Code Red mini-game must be manually activated. Nothing will happen if it's left unattended for any period of time. Though, if you were to activate it and then do nothing, yes, your dinosaurs would escape.
A Honkey!!!
no you can't because if you wanted to make a chimchar egg you would have to breed a female inferape with a male alakazam.
Some would be said to have more action than the others- but they all are really good movies.
Probably the most interesting sights during the Jurassic Period would be the plethora of dinosaurs. The world was dominated by these creatures at that time.
I would want to see the great variety of dinosaurs and other prehistoric animals, and hopefully get to observe their behavior.
Travelers would face dinosaurs, which would eat you alive. They could also face deep rivers or an ocean, which they could fall in. Hope this helped!:)
The Age of the Dinosaurs started in the in the Triassic era,went tothe Jurassic era,and ended in the Cretaceous era.
Lysine is essential for growth and functionality. In Jurassic Park, the dinosaurs were on a strict, lysine rich diet and this prevented them from dying. However, the lysine contingency that Robert Muldon refers to is the fact that if the dinosaurs were to "escape", without this lysine rich diet, they would go into a coma and shortly die. This was probably for safety and copyright reasons (to prevent anybody from stealing Ingen's dinosaurs).
you would see... 1.dinosaurs 2.archaeopteryx(first known bird) 3.cycados, cycads, conifiers, ginkos, and gymnosperms
Well the Jurassic was time of the giants. It was the Dinosaur's paradise. During this time oxygen levels were very high, which in turn super sized the herbivores. Sauropods like Brachiosaurus, Diplodocus, Camarosaurus etc., were almost invincible from predators because of there size. As for predators, well the main one was Allosaurus called the lion of the Jurassic. Allosaurus would have hunted in packs to kill sauropods.
It depends as dinosaurs came in a wide range of sizes. While we often thing of dinosaurs as huge most were actually small. Anchiornis, a dinosaur of the Late Jurassic, was about the size of a dove.BY this measure, megalodon was larger than most dinosaurs, but not all. Some sauropod dinosaurs would have been larger than megalodon.
Your Dinosaurs would escape Wrong. The Code Red mini-game must be manually activated. Nothing will happen if it's left unattended for any period of time. Though, if you were to activate it and then do nothing, yes, your dinosaurs would escape.
Sorry, but there is not living animal which is the same species it was during the Jurassic. Birds are avian dinosaurs, so they sort of count, but not really. The ancestors of modern-day gingko trees were incredibly common, and you can still find them in cities today. Even you did want to bring back a Jurassic dinosaur, the task is pretty much impossible, since no DNA evidence has ever been found in Cretaceous dinosaurs, let alone the older Jurassic fossils, and even if you did, the DNA would be so fragmented from molecular decay, that it would be like trying to put together a one billion piece puzzle.
human? Carnivorous dinosaurs such as Tyrannosaurus rex had no natural predators, but large herbivores such as Diplodocus would have been preyed upon by predators of the time. Some herbivores were naturally too large to have been eaten once they reached their full size. Some dinosaurs will have been cannibals and will have therefore have eaten each other and perhaps even their young. It is highly likely that some carnivores were opportunists, which meant that once another dinosaur was dead, they would prey on it.
No. In fact, dinosaurs are the ancestors of birds. Mammals separated from reptiles (a large group that still included what would become dinosaurs) about 300 million years ago, and birds evolved during the Jurassic period about 150 million years ago.