Biology, asked by suhaibbashir4, 9 months ago

WHY DINOSAURS
BECOME EXTINCT?​

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
0

Do the hitting of an asteroid which polluted the entire atmosphere with harmful gases and because of it dinasaurs couldn't survive . You will get a much better understanding if you search on Google . please mark as brainliest and follow me

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Answered by Anonymous
0

Answer:

Palaeontological deductions from the fossil remnants of extinct dinosaurs tell us much about their classification into species as well as about their physiological and behavioural characteristics. Geological evidence indicates that dinosaurs became extinct at the boundary between the Cretaceous and Paleogene eras, about 66 million years ago, at a time when there was worldwide environmental change resulting from the impact of a large celestial object with the Earth and/or from vast volcanic eruptions. However, apart from the presumption that climate change and interference with food supply contributed to their extinction, no biological mechanism has been suggested to explain why such a diverse range of terrestrial vertebrates ceased to exist. One of perhaps several contributing mechanisms comes by extrapolating from the physiology of the avian descendants of dinosaurs. This raises the possibility that cholecalciferol (vitamin D3) deficiency of developing embryos in dinosaur eggs could have caused their death before hatching, thus extinguishing the entire family of dinosaurs through failure to reproduce.

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