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12 answers

If you include all forms of life, the largest organisms are coral reefs and fungus colonies. Whole reefs can be one organism, and visible from high up in the atmosphere. We just recently discovered that massive colonies of fungus are actually one organism, and some of them exceed a square mile.
It may be a more subtle discovery than finding a dinosaur bone, but its possible.
Also, there were some land mammals that were comparable in size to smaller sauropods, like Indricotherium. Also, on average Dinosaur species were about the size of a large dog, some were no bigger than chickens. With that point in mind I am sure we will.

2007-12-21 03:45:05 · answer #1 · answered by Todd 7 · 0 0

Statistically you would find more bacteria than anything else. Its only been about a billion years since Earth had advanced life. Before then it was bacteria for about 3 BY. Probably most worlds never develop advanced cells and go on to develop animal life. On earth that seemed to require two major snowball earth events, each almost 100% fatal. If animal life does take hold, it seems likely that it would develop into a dinosaur stage: large animals with big teeth. Earth would still be in that stage if it weren't for a big space rock crashing into the Yucatan Peninsula 65 million years ago.

2016-05-25 07:08:59 · answer #2 · answered by luz 3 · 0 0

No. Extremely doubtful that Man would miss any larger animal. One must remember that there were plenty of small dinosaurs as well. And there have been plenty of new small species discovered.

2007-12-21 00:27:14 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

lol...No way. Not land-dwelling animals anyway. I know there is at least one largish animal in Australia that hasn't been discovered yet though, because I've seen it.

2007-12-21 00:28:47 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Bigfoot,Loch Ness Monster,Abomidible Snowman, Great Lake Nessie

2007-12-21 00:06:39 · answer #5 · answered by the gr8t one 5 · 1 4

Noope because if they were as big as the dinosaurs it would be too hard to not see them :P

2007-12-21 00:00:48 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 1 1

The ocean might produce some weird stuff.

2007-12-21 00:24:40 · answer #7 · answered by watergump44 4 · 2 1

No, that's highly unlikely. (here on Earth I mean).

2007-12-21 00:02:11 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 2 1

yes only if they were on mars

2007-12-21 00:01:42 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

probably bigger. look how long it took to find the titanosaurs.

2007-12-21 00:01:50 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 0 2