Where did Antarctosaurus live?

South America
Antarctosaurus (/ænˌtɑːrktoʊˈsɔːrəs/; meaning “southern lizard”) is a genus of titanosaurian sauropod dinosaur from the Late Cretaceous Period of what is now South America.

When did Antarctosaurus live?

89.3 million years ago – 70.6 million years ago (Turonian – Maastrichtian)Antarctosaurus / Lived

What plants did Brontosaurus eat?

It probably ate all sorts of plants including tree leaves and ferns. It didn’t chew its food, but rather had stones called gastroliths in its stomach that helped to digest its food.

What plants existed with dinosaurs?

When dinosaurs first became numerous in the late Triassic Period, nearly all of the major groups of vascular plants except the angiosperms were in existence. Conifers, cycadophytes, ginkgoes, ferns and large arborescent horsetails dominated the landscape.

What type of plants did dinosaurs eat?

Many of these plants had edible leaves, including evergreen conifers (pine trees, redwoods, and their relatives), ferns, mosses, horsetail rushes, cycads, ginkos, and in the latter part of the dinosaur age flowering (fruiting) plants.

What was the scariest dinosaur?

We’ve seen some scary dinosaurs before, the T-Rex, Utahraptor and Jeholopterus all come to mind, but the newly discovered Heterodontosaur may be the scariest of all. It was a small, fanged dinosaur species that wandered around the toes of other dinosaurs.

What is the oldest known plant?

What is this? Pando, the name of a massive clonal colony of quaking aspens in Utah’s Fishlake National Forest, is the oldest living plant in the world. Researchers aren’t sure how old Pando really is, but estimates say the tree colony is over 80,000 years old.

What plants survived the dinosaur extinction?

The dinosaurs were lost, forests were leveled and four out of five species of plant went extinct in areas close to the impact site. And yet, from the ashes of the impact, the first life to recolonize these areas were the ferns.