Sculelos
Active Member
Ah I never heard of that before.
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Some small ones I believe might still exist in remote parts.
Nonsense.The things about Dinosaurs is I believe the eggs basically remain in hibernation buried forever until temperatures are right to hatch,
Yes, we do, actually.One things for sure is we don't know what happened to the Dino's or where they went or even if they are extinct or not,
But is there any reason to think 65 million year hibernation is even remotely possible even for the most stalwart of bacteria?for all we know they could be living in underground swamps or the depths of the sea or buried in the ground waiting for warmer temperatures to hatch, it's really impossible to know for sure since we know so little about these 'Terrible Lizards'.
Unlikely. The global temperature has dropped too much.
Nonsense.
Yes, we do, actually.
It's pretty darned definitive that at the same level that dinosaur fossils start disappearing we find a level of iridium, a component found all the time in asteroids but rarely on earth. A massive crater in Mexico has been dated to that exact time period. I've even heard another crater was found in Africa from about the same time period, indicating a one-two punch.
One, two, or multiple asteroids did it. End of story.
But is there any reason to think 65 million year hibernation is even remotely possible even for the most stalwart of bacteria?
If the second and third video were fakes they were very, very good fakes and ones that I've never seen anyone do any better at anytime ever.
Some other species were thought were extinct have reappeared lately so there might be something we don't know.
Illusionists are clever people. But not the ones who conjured up those obvious fakes.If the second and third video were fakes they were very, very good fakes and ones that I've never seen anyone do any better at anytime ever.
Not possible. The plesiosaurus was too small to be an air-breather living that deep down.I'm fairly confident that the plesiosaurus still lives in the depths under the ocean floor but barely ever surfaces.
Yes, it did. It would have affected the weather, which would have affected the temperature of the ocean, which would have affected migratory patterns, currents, etc., which would have screwed up the entire food chain.As for other types not really sure. Perhaps whatever Impacted the Earth didn't effect the water types like it did the land types.
I am curious now, because that I did not know. I know you can't recreate them all from a single amber-encased mosquito, but what is the classification of dinosaur, because I thought the plesiosaurus was a dinosaur, as well as what may have been what people where claiming was the Lockness Monster, or at least it's an interesting and maybe plausible idea.
Nup...not dinosaurs.
If it helps, I never knew that until I taught a primary school class about dinosaurs...
Sauropterygia - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
I have a question for the masses, though. I thought dinosaurs were reptiles, just not lizards (and instead were of their own group).
But according to many here, that's incorrect?
Nope, not reptiles. Dinosaurs had hollow bones like birds, so were not classified as reptiles. Also, they were warm-blooded.
I think you're right, actually. In spite of their hollow bones and warm blood, it looks like they're still classified as reptiles.
Theropod Dinosaurs
How Dinosaurs Grew the World's Longest Necks | Sauropods | LiveScience
Vanakkam,
No seriously, you are not going to reject his stuff as simple "bad cgi" ?
Can't you see the OBVIOUS guys ?
How long are you gonna mock him before seeing the truth !
The CATS plans are coming to fruition ! Those dinosaurs appearance in our century is the proof that they are one step closer to world domination !
These are just failed experiments, BUT if we continue to allow them to do this, they will find a way to re-compose the ADN of the mighty cat alien race, the ones that came inhabit eath thousand of years ago and are responsible for building pyramids. (How else do you explain egypt monuments are covered in cats and cats Gods !)
The MCAR (mighty cat alien race) were wiped out by some cataclysmic stuff they couldn't avoid because they couldn't read the Maya calendrar. So they went extinct along with the dinosaurs...But their ADN still survive in our history legacy !
If the cats are allowed to resurrect the MCAR, we are doomed ! They can easily control us with their mind control fluffyness and will enslave the entire human population in order to rebuild a spaceship to conquer the galaxy.
We have to share those videos and THE TRUTH ASAP and as far as we can !
You want more proof ? Do you REALLY need more proof !? There you go, I warned you ! And don't tell me it's CGI, I'm damn good at CGI, I am a CGI maker professionnal and got electronic stuff to make and detect CGI implanted in my brain. But you can't see it it's top secret.
Futurama foretold this....
fantôme profane;3428567 said:Red Dwarf foretold it first.
I'm still not convinced. Not trying to be difficult, but I don't think cold-bloodedness is a pre-requisite for reptiles. I think that current day reptiles are all cold-blooded, but that's not the same thing at all.
I'm also not convinced that all dinosaurs had hollow bones...or at least, that not all their bones were hollow.
I did a bit of digging...(excuse the pun)
Holes in fossil bones reveal dinosaur activity
I read a bunch of articles, but basically it seems like the warm-blooded theory is pretty strongly considered accurate, and is supported by a bunch of evidence. I couldn't quite tell whether it's accepted that ALL dinosaurs were warm-blooded though.
This is a worth a quick look too...
The 10 Most Important Dinosaur Bones
I'm sticking with my 'dinosaurs are reptiles, but not lizards' view of the world for now.
Check out this footage! This is particularly amazing, and I don't know how anyone can not believe dinosaurs are walking among us after seeing it:
[youtube]FXiIP_dMJjo[/youtube]
I'd say Dinosaur really is too broad of a classification to know if they were warm or cold blooded for sure.
Birds are typically warm blooded but most Reptiles are cold blooded including Alligators, Crocodiles and Lizards.
However I don't like the word Dinosaur because it is by definite not definitive. I'd probably more likely just call them Dragons like the ancients did.
Allosaurus/Carcharodontosaurus/Tyrannosaurus : Water type, egg laying, cold blooded, Omnivore, scaled.
Ankylosaurus: Swamp type, egg laying, cold blooded, herbivore, thick scales.
Apatosaurus/Brachiosaurus/Diplodocus: Swamp type, egg laying, cold blooded, herbivore, scaled
Brachylophosaurus: Water type, omnivore, scaled, cold blooded.
Deinonychus/Dromaeosaur/Velociraptor mongoliensis: Air type, feathered, egg laying, warm blooded, omnivore
Iguanodon/maiasaura: Swamp type, Scaled, egg laying, cold blooded
Mosasaur: Sea type, scaled, egg laying, cold blooded.
Oviraptor philoceratops/troodon formosus: Air type, feathered, egg laying, warm blooded.
Protoceratops/Triceratops : Swamp type, scaled, egg laying, cold blooded.
Spinosaurus: Water type, scaled, egg laying, cold blooded.
Stegosaurus: Swamp type, scaled, egg laying, cold blooded.