Dinosaurs are still alive. You can sea them on TV.
2007-01-25 02:02:58
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answer #1
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answered by hanibal 5
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Hopefully, the teacher is letting you on with this if this is the true question. No modern or pre-human ever lived or walked with Dinosaurs. Modern man has only been around for perhaps the last 50,000 years or so. The dinosaurs went extinct in Cretaeous era, just before the teirsiary era, 65,000,000 years ago. Pehaps the teacher means the Mayan or the Inca or the Aztec DYNASTY. All those events happened around 1539 or so. The Spainish Civil war happened in 1936 with Francisco Frano, a general in the Nationalist Army eventually coming out on top (with the help of German Stuka bombers on loan from Hitler.)
2007-01-24 22:23:22
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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Greenhouse gasses keep our planet Earth warm and habitable. If not for the greenhouse effect of our atmosphere our planet would be a giant frozen iceball. During the long history of our planet there have been episodes of global warming and global cooling. While planetary pertubations and solar activity have played some role in this, most of the variation has come from changes in atmospheric gasses. Sometimes evolutionary processes have contributed to atmospheric gasses (evolution of phytoplankton, evolution of gymnosperms, etc.) and sometimes geological events like supervolcanic eruptions. Volcanoes affect the atmosphere because they put carbon dioxide into the air, which traps heat and leads to global warming. The greatest volcanic activity the Earth has ever seen, 251 million years ago (mya) covered Siberia in lava flows several hundred feet deep (google Siberian traps) and caused the Earth's temperature to rise 26 degrees F. The result was the sudden extinction of 99% of all life on our planet (google Permian/Triassic mass extinction event). The geological sediments following this era are known as the "dead zone." A less extreme supervolcanic event warmed Earth 14 mya bringing about tropical forests in Europe. All polar ice melted and Florida was under 200 feet of water (go look for marine fossils at Cargill Mines in Florida sometime). Another supervolcanic event ended the Pleistocene Ice Age. Human activity, such as the burning of fossil fuels, puts a lot of carbon dioxide into the air, enough so that we now mimic a supervolcanic event. Unless we want to see the consequences of a Florida 200 feet under water or the sudden extinction of 99% of species, perhaps we should then take global warming more seriously.
2016-05-24 06:59:48
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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You need to get your facts right as the Dinosaurs where long gone in the days of the Spanish Civil War!
2007-01-24 22:53:46
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answer #4
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answered by rachelsweet2001 4
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The Tuatara from New Zealand is possibly the last of the Dinosaurs, their close relatives became extinct about 60 million years ago, but they're still around... just
2007-01-24 21:49:40
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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I only hope this is a joke, or the world has a bleek future with you running around asking were all the Dinosaurs are.
2007-01-24 21:19:43
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answer #6
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answered by Matthew 3
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According to proven geologic data,dinosaurs ceased to be in existence millions of years before civilisation.Probably in the Jurassic Era.
2007-01-24 21:37:57
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answer #7
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answered by slima 1
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i think you are mixed up, everyone knows it was the dinosaurs who wiped out the spanish and yeah, it was in the 1960's.
2007-01-25 05:44:51
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answer #8
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answered by Dave O 2
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1974. But it was the advent of disco that killed the dinosaurs.
2007-01-24 21:16:06
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answer #9
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answered by Anonymous
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I'm intrigued. I didn't know the SCW had anything to do
with dinosaurs. And who says they're all dead?
2007-01-24 22:52:38
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answer #10
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answered by Anonymous
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