A new study shows some dinosaurs were warm-blooded and could regulate their body temperature. This adaptation helped them ...
Nocifora, Alfio, 66, of Lighthouse Point, passed away December 3, 2003 surrounded by his wife Rita and loving family. He was born in Priolo, Sicily in 1937 and came to Connecticut in 1953.
Researchers studied the geographic distribution of dinosaurs to draw conclusions about whether they could regulate their ...
Nocifora, Alfio, 66, of Lighthouse Point, passed away December 3, 2003 surrounded by his wife Rita and loving family. He was born in Priolo, Sicily in 1937 and came to Connecticut in 1955.
Alfio Lombardo Alfio Lombardo died May 3, 2005. Alfio is survived by his wife of 26 years, Levita, his daughter, Rosemarie, sons, John, Max, Robert & Frank, daughters-in-law, Joanna, Joyce ...
Dinosaurs were initially cold-blooded, but global warming 180 million years ago may have triggered the evolution of ...
Knowing when dinos evolved their stable internal thermometer could help scientists answer questions about how they lived ...
The ability to regulate body temperature, a trait all mammals and birds have today, may have evolved among some dinosaurs early in the Jurassic period about 180 million years ago. The new study looked ...