From 230 million to 63 million years ago.
Sinónimos
Examples for "Mesozoic"
Examples for "Mesozoic"
1Jurassic and Cretaceous beds form the greater part of the Mesozoic band.
2This museum contains a huge collection of Carboniferous, Mesozoic and tertiary material.
3Why should not these proportions have been different during the Mesozoic epoch?
4At the end of the Mesozoic the entire tribe of ammonites became extinct.
5This collection contains specimens from important and unique local Mesozoic and Pleistocene deposits.
1There might even be new groups of dinosaurs that didn't exist during the Mesozoic era.
2The Mesozoic era was characterized by large seas, lakes, deltas with deserts, and occasional glaciers.
3At the opening of the Mesozoic era reptiles were the most highly organized and powerful of any animals on the earth.
4He said that the lizardlike tuatara dates back to the Mesozoic era & there is only one other tuatara in this country.
5This group was the longest-lived of any of the three, beginning in the Trias and continuing to the close of the Mesozoic era.
1The age of reptiles waited for the clearing of the air of the burden of carbon dioxide.
2On account of this predominance of the reptile-class, the period is called "the age of reptiles."
4William Smith's system of strata, next above these, once called "secondary," represents Mesozoic time, or the age of reptiles.
5A closer examination of these early reptiles may be postponed until we come to speak of the " age of reptiles."
6Why exactly does the Age of Reptiles end with the Cretaceous?
7As the Age of Reptiles was drawing to a close, the first flowers and mammals appeared.
8The Mesozoic was the Age of Reptiles.
9Then it's the glorious Age of Reptiles, unanimously depicted by Tyrannosaurus rex locked in eternal conflict with mortal enemy Triceratops.
10What strange constellations shone down upon our globe when its masters of life were the monstrous beasts of the '' Age of Reptiles''?
11We may say that the bird, for all its advances in organisation, remains obscure and unprosperous as long as the Age of Reptiles lasts.
12North America in the Age of Reptiles would have seemed almost as strange to our eyes in its geography as in its animals and plants.
13Thus, since vertebrates appeared, we have in succession the Age of Fishes, the Age of Amphibians, the Age of Reptiles, and the Age of Mammals.
Translations for age of reptiles