So far as I can tell, that would be the only way for man and dinosaur to co-exist. Otherwise, we couldn't stand a chance against the giant beasts.
so here's my question:
How did we domesticate them? was it instantaneous or did we have to have to wade through a few generations of semi-domestic dinosaurs before they were fully domesticated?
2007-01-10
06:32:17
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15 answers
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asked by
pastor of muppets
6
in
Society & Culture
➔ Religion & Spirituality
oops, repeated myself a little there.
this is not a joke. I need to know.
2007-01-10
06:37:17 ·
update #1
well, Ivan, it is hard to believe that explanation. Especially in light of the fact that we have fossils of dinosaurs that were carnivores. Or is it just that, as a previous poster said, God didn't create the dinosaur, just their skeletons intact in the ground
2007-01-10
06:46:30 ·
update #2
You fail to understand the concept of creationism. Man did not run around with the dinosaurs. God created all of the fossils in the ground intact as we find them. Species did not die out as they do today, they were all created at once and the process is that we are all going to die out.
2007-01-10 06:38:18
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answer #1
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answered by bocasbeachbum 6
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Man and dinosaurs did not co-exist. Man came along after dinosaurs were extinct.
Dinosaurs covered the Mesozoic (-250-100 million years), while human-like creatures came along around the Miocene (-20 million years).
2007-01-10 14:45:22
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answer #2
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answered by Phoenix, Wise Guru 7
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When man walked with the dinosaurs in the preflood era they were planteaters and scavengers, not the predators that some are shown to have been. Animals did have a fear of man as well. but i doubt that you would believe this explanation any way.
2007-01-10 14:39:28
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answer #3
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answered by ? 7
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According to the book of Job in the Bible we did not domesticate them because they were not conrtolable. It was too dangerous. Remember the world was a big place, and the population in those days was small and many people could have lived their lives and never seen one. They were not all that big you know, in fact the largest animal ever to live is still here and we don't see it as a threat. (Whales)
2007-01-10 14:40:59
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answer #4
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answered by oldguy63 7
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But man and dinosaurs DIDN't Co-exist.
Dinosaurs died out some 5 million years before early primates even appeared.
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2007-01-10 14:36:07
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answer #5
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answered by Nobody 5
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There is no scientific evidence that dinosaurs and humans occupied the earth at the same time. By the time humans evolved, the dinos were gone.
2007-01-10 14:37:35
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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We didn't domesticate them. They became creatures of the sea. Have you heard of the Lockness monster. Hundreds of people have seen him. He only surfaces once in a while. Check out this link.
http://www.drdino.com
2007-01-10 14:55:36
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answer #7
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answered by Freedom 7
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Why the assumption that dinosaurs were domesticated? Would you not have to apply the same reasoning to bears, mountain lions, and hippos? (And how many people die each year from hippos?).
2007-01-10 14:44:28
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answer #8
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answered by Jerry 3
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according to the bible, people lived to be up to 1000 years old back then. So i'd say they had the time.
Who said they domesticated them?
Do you domesticate tigers?
2007-01-10 14:38:38
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answer #9
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answered by Doug 5
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Who says we did? There are still thousands of species out there that we haven't "domesticated." YBIC
2007-01-10 14:37:23
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answer #10
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answered by Anonymous
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