Plants that lived during the Quaternary period include heavy grasses that provided nutrition for animals like the woolly mammoth. With glaciers covering more than 30 percent of the Earth, mammoth steppes, or giant areas of grasslands were the primary plants at the time.
Aquatic plants
In the Cretaceous Period, small things like Ginkgos could be edible, and common things you could find along elongated coastlines, such as shellfish, and even small breeds of fish. (I am not positive they were in the Cretaceous Period) You could also eat small ferns, as they could be weak if they were young, and provide a tasty tea when boiled.
Mushrooms and moss
The answer is Extinct!
Psittacosaurus lived in a variety of habitats such as forests, woodlands, and plains during the Early Cretaceous period. They were found in what is now Asia, especially in modern-day China and Mongolia.
Arctic brush, many kinds of tropical trees lived across the equator.
The structure of the hemoglobin in a molecule is the quaternary structure.
Well. Plants took root about 500 MILLION years ago. So the answer is almost all of the plants.
Pander's Fish (Panderichthys) EusthenopteronObruchevichthys Elpistostege Ceratodus Dunkleosteus
Some of the dinosaurs that lived in the Triassic period include: Pterosauras, Coelophysis, Plateosaurus, and Peteinosaurus. (Lol It Was 4 Ma Science Project ;] )
I'm pretty sure it's quaternary"If several protein chains associate w/ one another to form a functional protein, the protein is said to have a quaternary structure" - 'Human Physiology, 4th E', Dee Unglaub Silverthorn
what kind of houses mesopotamia people lived in
Its a Nice question the answer is that they are Quaternary consumer because they eat tertiary consumers like hawk.
English people lived in Jamestown but they were not pilgrims that lived in Jamestown
No particular kind of home is prescribed by Islam. Muslims lived as the others lived.
Plants. :)
plants in iran