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USGS
usgs.gov › faqs › where-did-dinosaurs-live
Where did dinosaurs live? | U.S. Geological Survey
Dinosaurs lived on all of the continents. At the beginning of the age of dinosaurs (during the Triassic Period, about 230 million years ago), the continents were arranged together as a single supercontinent called Pangea. During the 165 million years of dinosaur existence this supercontinent ...
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Khan Academy
khanacademy.org › partner-content › amnh › dinosaurs › studying-dinosaurs › a › where-in-the-world-did-dinosaurs-live
Where in the world did dinosaurs live? (article)
Dinosaurs first appeared on Earth about 228 million years. They varied greatly in shape and size. Some weighed more than 80 tons and were more than 120 feet long. Others were the size of a finch and weighed as little as 8 ounces. Most dinosaurs became extinct at the end of the Cretaceous period ...
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American Museum of Natural History
amnh.org › explore › videos › dinosaurs-and-fossils › where-in-the-world-did-dinosaurs-live
Where in the world did dinosaurs live? | AMNH
Fossils of dinosaurs have now been found on every continent, almost everywhere that rocks of Late Triassic, Jurassic, or Cretaceous rocks are exposed on the Earth's surface. Because dinosaurs were (and in the form of birds still are) such a ...
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ThoughtCo
thoughtco.com › where-did-dinosaurs-live-1091965
Where Did Dinosaurs Live?
May 7, 2025 - In polar regions, dinosaurs like Leaellynasaura lived despite the long, dark winters. The lush jungles of what is now the Sahara Desert were home to many types of dinosaurs.
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Only Dinosaurs
onlydinosaurs.com › home › dinosaur knowledge › where did the dinosaur live? fun facts you want to know
Where Did The Dinosaur Live? Fun Facts You Want To Know
September 28, 2025 - However, the continent was home to some of the fiercest species of dinosaurs. Among the dinosaurs that lived in Africa were Spinosaurus, titanosaurs, and sauropods. ... Australia may be cold now and may not support many temperate animals, but during the era of the dinosaurs, the climate wasn’t as it is today.
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American Museum of Natural History
amnh.org › explore › videos › dinosaurs-and-fossils › in-what-kind-of-environment-did-dinosaurs-live
In what kind of environment did dinosaurs live? | AMNH
Most of the dinosaurs we have found lived along ancient rivers or streams and roamed across the adjacent forested floodplains and densely vegetated swamps and lakes. Some discoveries have also shown that dinosaurs inhabited ancient deserts strewn ...
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Wikipedia
en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Dinosaur
Dinosaur - Wikipedia
3 days ago - Other lines of evidence suggesting endothermy include the presence of feathers and other types of body coverings in many lineages (see § Feathers); more consistent ratios of the isotope oxygen-18 in bony tissue compared to ectotherms, particularly as latitude and thus air temperature varied, which suggests stable internal temperatures (although these ratios can be altered during fossilization); and the discovery of polar dinosaurs, which lived in Australia, Antarctica, and Alaska when these places would have had cool, temperate climates.
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Dinosaur Universe
dinosaur-universe.com › accueil › blog › where did dinosaurs live?
Where Did Dinosaurs Live? | Dinosaur Universe
October 15, 2022 - Fossils of dinosaurs have been discovered in lagoons more often than any other environment. Dead organisms are exceptionally well preserved in silt. Despite their vast size, these water bodies trapped by rocks were no more numerous in dinosaur times than they are now.
Find elsewhere
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Dinosaur World Live
dinosaurworldlive.com › blog › 9-habitats-where-dinosaurs-lived
9 Habitats Where Dinosaurs Lived | Kids Show | Dinosaur World Live
Dinosaurs loved taking a long walk by the shore in pursuit of food. While the shorelines of the Mesozoic Era were not the same as they are today, preserved footprints indicate a shoreline migration route along the western edge of the Western Interior Sea.
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Natural History Museum
nhm.ac.uk › discover › when-did-dinosaurs-live.html
When did dinosaurs live? | Natural History Museum
It was in this environment that the reptiles known as dinosaurs first evolved. Reptiles tend to flourish in hot climates because their skin is less porous than, for example, mammal skin, so it loses less water in the heat. Reptile kidneys are also better at conserving water. Toward the end of the Triassic, a series of earthquakes and massive volcanic eruptions caused Pangaea to slowly begin to break into two. This was the birth of the North Atlantic Ocean. Coelophysis lived towards the end of the Triassic Period, as did these other Late Triassic dinosaurs.
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The only place non-avian dinosaurs didn't seem to live was in the ocean as all major marine reptiles weren't dinosaurs but some other archosaur or Mozasaurs which are related to modern day monitor lizards. Dinosaurs have been discovered on every single continent including Antarctica, in every type of biome from desert to forest to steppe to river deltas. Some of the best specimens have come from river watersheds such as the hell creek formation or Morrison because the conditions on river banks is the best for preserving large body animals but plenty of other formations exist away from river banks. EDIT: clarifications. So I've seen a lot of the same comments so I'll leave a reply here to these questions. Antarctica at the time of the dinosaurs (the Mesozoic) would not have been covered in ice, it also would not have been on the south pole, rather closer to modern day South Africa. That being said, dinosaurs have been discovered in what would have been their Arctic Circle where it would have snowed regularly, experienced very cold temperatures in the winter and had 1-3 months of no sun. Dinosaurs that lived in this region permanently had special adaptations such as Truodonts in this region being much bigger than their southern cousins while a type of Tyrannosaurus (not THE T. Rex but a relative) had a smaller body. It's also worth mentioning that dinosaurs were not cold blooded rather a sort of in between called Mezotherm. To what extent depends heavily on the dinosaur. Not all ancient reptiles that lived in the Mesozoic was a dinosaur and in short the different is taxonomy, the relationships between species. All animals classified as dinosaurs have a distinct common ancestor that separates them from all other reptiles. One interesting thing is the fact that all dinosaurs, from triceratops to deinococcus to modern barn owls have a very specific pelvis that is unlike any other reptile. Plesiosaurs, Ichthyasaurs, Mozasaurs, and Ptarosaurs are not dinosaurs as they do not share the same ancestor as all dinosaurs, and in the case of the aquatic reptiles, split off from dinosaurs long before dinosaurs themselves became a distinct Clade.
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I highly recommend PBS Eons YouTube channel. They have some amazing videos on the lives and habitats of dinosaurs. Apparently they even lived in the Arctic circle. (Arctic circle was a much different place back then, but it still lacked sunlight for months at a time and was extremely cold)
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Quora
quora.com › Were-all-dinosaurs-located-in-one-area-or-were-they-spread-out-across-the-world
Were all dinosaurs located in one area or were they spread out across the world? - Quora
Answer: Back in distant pre-history, they were all in “one area”. All of the land masses on Earth were combined into a supercontinent that had several names such as Pangaea and Gondwanaland depending on the geological era.
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Deseret News
deseret.com › u-s-world › 2020 › 9 › 1 › 21408531 › dinosaur-map-hometown-interactive
Which dinosaurs live in your hometown? New map helps you find out – Deseret News
December 19, 2023 - Want to know which dinosaurs lived in Salt Lake City 65 million years ago? Now, you can see, thanks to an interactive map. For example, enter “Salt Lake City.” The map lists “Grallator, Triceratops, Centrosaurus” as nearby fossils.
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Homework.Study.com
homework.study.com › explanation › what-country-did-dinosaurs-live-in.html
What country did dinosaurs live in? | Homework.Study.com
Pangea broke apart about 175 million years ago, forming our current continents of Africa, South America, North America, Antarctica, Europe, Asia, and Australia. Become a Study.com member to unlock this answer! Create your account View this answer · See full answer below.
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The Guardian
theguardian.com › science › 2009 › feb › 07 › pangaea-dinosaurs-where-they-lived
Dinosaurs: Where did they live? | Dinosaurs | The Guardian
February 14, 2018 - When dinosaurs came into existence nearly 230m years ago, all of the world's land masses were joined in one C-shaped "supercontinent", Pangaea. Of course, these earliest dinosaurs may have only lived in certain parts of Pangaea, and the oldest ...
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YouTube
youtube.com › watch
The Very Long Time of the Dinosaurs! | History of Life ...
Enjoy the videos and music you love, upload original content, and share it all with friends, family, and the world on YouTube.
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GeoscienceINFO
geoscienceinfo.com › home › posts › where are the dinosaurs?
Where are the dinosaurs? - GeoscienceINFO
April 13, 2022 - Map of southwestern Ontario showing rock units exposed at or near the surface (adapted from Carter 2011). Fear not. Ask any paleontologist, and they will all agree that dinosaurs almost certainly did live in what is now Ontario, Canada.
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Quora
quora.com › Where-did-most-of-the-large-dinosaurs-live-on-Earth-during-their-time-period
Where did most of the large dinosaurs live on Earth during their time period? - Quora
Answer (1 of 2): Dinosaurs were widespread across every continent on earth throughout their existence (and technically still are), there were some islands too small to support large dinosaurs but that's it.